It Chapter two

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rosscoe(au)
#1It Chapter two
Posted: 9/4/19 at 11:19am

Well sadly that was disappointing. 


Well I didn't want to get into it, but he's a Satanist. Every full moon he sacrifices 4 puppies to the Dark Lord and smears their blood on his paino. This should help you understand the score for Wicked a little bit more. Tazber's: Reply to Is Stephen Schwartz a Practicing Christian

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Mike Barrett
#2It Chapter two
Posted: 9/4/19 at 2:32pm

Reviews have been very mixed so far. I haven't read much about them other than people's general feelings. Theres an early showing tonight I plant to attend. Hoping for the best! Loved the first one not being a major horror fan in general so I think I'll enjoy this. 

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rosscoe(au)
#3It Chapter two
Posted: 9/4/19 at 9:03pm

A lot of Australian cinemas on Wednesday night played a double feature of Part one , followed by a preview screening of Part two. Watching them back to back, Part One was a superior movie. Part two sadly just left you wanting more scares and a better final showdown ( yes I know the ending of the book was a huge WTF moment ( which I liked ) but I’m not sure what they have come up with works either ) 


Well I didn't want to get into it, but he's a Satanist. Every full moon he sacrifices 4 puppies to the Dark Lord and smears their blood on his paino. This should help you understand the score for Wicked a little bit more. Tazber's: Reply to Is Stephen Schwartz a Practicing Christian

Mike Barrett  Profile Photo
Mike Barrett
#4It Chapter two
Posted: 9/5/19 at 9:27am

I thought the first one was better as well. Not a poor sequel, but didn’t capture the “magic”’of the first run. First one was just a complete home run where I feel this missed the mark a tiny bit in some aspects. Comparing it to the 1st one I do feel the 1st is the superior film but it’s more a testament to the first film rather than a disservice to this one. Just my opinion

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ACL2006
#5It Chapter two
Posted: 9/5/19 at 10:34am

I just hope they didn't screw up the ending like the 90s miniseries did. No spoilers as I'm not seeing it until next week.


A Chorus Line revival played its final Broadway performance on August 17, 2008. The tour played its final performance on August 21, 2011. A new non-equity tour started in October 2012 played its final performance on March 23, 2013. Another non-equity tour launched on January 20, 2018. The tour ended its US run in Kansas City and then toured throughout Japan August & September 2018.

LxGstv
#6It Chapter two
Posted: 9/6/19 at 9:39am

Disappointing indeed. I found that it couldn’t really establish a proper rhythm with the back and forth. But my biggest problem was with that awful opening sequence.


 

 
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That gay bashing opening sequence was incredibly unnecessary... there’s not even a resolution or follow up, it’s just there... and then later on they hint at Richie being gay, but never actually say it... just made the whole thing worse somehow...


Some people on Twitter are mentioning the letters at the end as well, saying how it’s normalizing suicide and how it was ok for Stanley to kill himself because it helped the group... which if you really think about, is highly problematic...

 

Updated On: 9/6/19 at 09:39 AM

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rosscoe(au)
#7It Chapter two
Posted: 9/6/19 at 9:46am

That opening moments was lifted straight from the book, but it’s been a while since I read the book, but I thought Pennywise had a run in with a couple of those people and in a way justice was served. But memory is an interesting thing.


Well I didn't want to get into it, but he's a Satanist. Every full moon he sacrifices 4 puppies to the Dark Lord and smears their blood on his paino. This should help you understand the score for Wicked a little bit more. Tazber's: Reply to Is Stephen Schwartz a Practicing Christian

LxGstv
#8It Chapter two
Posted: 9/6/19 at 9:53am

rosscoe(au) said: "That opening moments was lifted straight from the book, but it’s been a while since I read the book, but I thought Pennywise had a run in with a couple of those people and in a way justice was served. But memory is an interesting thing. "

It is from the book, but there were a lot of things from the book they didn’t use.. that should have been one of them... imo.

 

edit: my problem was that because there was no follow up or anything like that, it kinda normalizes the behavior... it gives an “yeah, this happens” vibe and there are no consequences for acts like that. 

Updated On: 9/6/19 at 09:53 AM

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Jordan Catalano
#9It Chapter two
Posted: 9/6/19 at 2:19pm

Well, I loved every minute of it. I understand why some will be upset with it but I think it’s a perfect finish to the story. It almost comes off as a companion piece to “Stand By Me”, my favorite King film adaptation. And like that, this also left me just crying pretty damn hard at the ending, something I really didn’t expect. Yes, the film is more of a drama than a horror film but I feel thats was the correct way to do it and relying on more scares (and there were plenty) would have only lessened the characters growth and interactions with each other. I’ll gonna see it again this weekend and elaborate on my thoughts but I really truly loved this.
Also, Bill Hader is a marvel and I have the BIGGEST crush on James Ransone now.

AEA AGMA SM
#10It Chapter two
Posted: 9/6/19 at 4:51pm

I saw it this morning and really liked it. There were a few subtle touches that I thought were pretty masterful, though I'll admit that there were a few small moments, mostly around design decisions, that pulled me slightly out of the story, but not for very long. Very few of the changes or deletions from the book bothered me and I thought most worked amazingly well. The casting was pretty much spot on, and the de-aging of the child actors for the flashbacks was done well for the most part (the only one I really noticed it on was Jack Dylan Grazer/Eddie, and that was more due to them not being quite able to match his voice from where it was in the first film).

It's definitely a film that I would go see again in the theaters with any friends who haven't seen it yet. And I had the added side bonus of seeing the ad/trailer for Cinepolis's "Handpicked" series, so now I know I can go see a screening of the director's cut of Little Shop of Horrors on October 1st!

Slight spoiler: I got a good chuckle out of the running joke of Bill not knowing how to write a good ending for his books and movies (and the novel of It suffers from that just as much as a lot of King's other works).

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Jordan Catalano
#11It Chapter two
Posted: 9/6/19 at 5:41pm

AND THAT CAMEO IN THE ANTIQUE STORE!!

MikeInTheDistrict Profile Photo
MikeInTheDistrict
#12It Chapter two
Posted: 9/7/19 at 12:01am

LxGstv said: "rosscoe(au) said: "That opening moments was lifted straight from the book, but it’s been a while since I read the book, but I thought Pennywise had a run in with a couple of those people and in a way justice was served. But memory is an interesting thing. "

It is from the book, but there were a lot of things from the book they didn’t use.. that should have been one of them... imo.



edit: my problem was that because there was no follow up or anything like that, it kinda normalizes the behavior... it gives an “yeah, this happens” vibe and there are no consequences for acts like that.
"



In the novel, that scene functions as the first definitive evidence of Pennywise's return to Derry. The teens that commit the murder are sentenced to prison. I agree that the lack of that second detail the trial and sentencing of the murderers) gives that scene a jarring lack of closure, but that's pretty much how all the deaths in this film are: both the lonely little girl and the little boy on the skateboard are devoured by Pennywise with no follow-up. Heck, Bill would probably be a prime suspect for the murder of that boy because he was seen following the kid into the funhouse where the child died. But this is never addressed. Neither is the fact that the little girl's mother seems to be completely oblivious when her daughter wanders off from the bleachers in the night. I just figure that the entire town is under IT's spell, and there's a more cavalier attitude toward the missing children/victims. We also never get to know who tells Eddie's wife he's dead (and how he died).

King based the opening murder scene on an actual murder -- that of Charlie Howard in 1984: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killing_of_Charlie_Howard

Updated On: 9/7/19 at 12:01 AM

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ColorTheHours048
#13It Chapter two
Posted: 9/7/19 at 1:30am

I didn’t really care for it.

The scene with the gay bashing and the scene with the little girl under the bleachers felt the most effective in the whole movie. A problem, since they are essentially totally unrelated to the plot. Lots of wham-bang set pieces and not a lot of actual suspense.

I thought Bill Hader and James Ransone were excellent and James McAvoy was very good. Everyone else felt mostly wasted, even Jessica Chastain, who I usually love. Even Bill Skarsgård felt simultaneously over- and underused. Yeah, Pennywise is scary, but once you’ve seen him lurk behind someone and move all jerky toward them, you’ve seen it. And yet we get the same scare over and over.

Super disappointing. They could have really gone for broke with this, and they did in a sense, just in all the wrong ways.

Updated On: 9/7/19 at 01:30 AM

AEA AGMA SM
#14It Chapter two
Posted: 9/7/19 at 8:49pm

rosscoe(au) said: "That opening moments was lifted straight from the book, but it’s been a while since I read the book, but I thought Pennywise had a run in with a couple of those people and in a way justice was served. But memory is an interesting thing."

In the books Pennywise gets mentioned by a couple of the bashers during their interrogations and the cops insist to each other (and maybe the DA?) that they can't acknowledge or bring it up because the defense lawyers will use that to say the bashers are not guilty of murder, that it was this "guy dressed up as a clown" under the bridge who actually killed Adrian Mellon. It sets up the idea that gets explored later of how Pennywise has always been a part of Derry and in order to maintain the symbiotic relationship between It and Derry that It has to be ignored to a certain extent. 

I didn't mind the lack of any sort of resolution or justice in the film for this scene that someone else mentioned above. In the book King does mention the trials and verdicts, but this event was also the kick-start to the new cycle in the book, and Mike didn't make the calls to the rest of the Losers until the following spring. In the film they used this event as the catalyst to drive Mike to make the calls, and the rest of the film plays out within days of it happening, so it makes sense that the aftermath and what happens to the guys who beat Adrian is not explored.

SouthernCakes
#15It Chapter two
Posted: 9/8/19 at 4:31pm

So I hate clowns. But I’m finally ready to watch IT. Should I start with the modern adaption or the older movie? Which is closer to the book?

AEA AGMA SM
#16It Chapter two
Posted: 9/8/19 at 4:47pm

SouthernCakes said: "So I hate clowns. But I’m finally ready to watch IT. Should I start with the modern adaption or the older movie? Which is closer to the book?"

You'll find purists who still say the 1990 mini-series is the better of the two, but the reality is that it was made for network television in 1990 so it's very tamed down. The acting overall is what you would expect from a bunch of sitcom stars (John Ritter and Harry Anderson played two of the adult characters) and untested child actors, and it had an even harder time making sense of the whacko ending of the book with those limitations and very dated special effects. Tim Curry's performance is pretty much the only thing worth revisiting that version for.

The new movies do take more liberties with the story, especially with the shifting of the time periods, moving the young years from the late 50s to the late 80s and the adult years from the mid 80s to present day. That being said, having rewatched the 1990 version not too long ago on Hulu I have no desire to ever watch that one again, whereas I do rewatch the first movie on a fairly regular basis and will most certainly do the same once Chapter 2 is released on Blu Ray.

SouthernCakes
#17It Chapter two
Posted: 9/8/19 at 6:23pm

Would normally pass on a clown movie but it’s such a classic that I want to know the general story

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MikeInTheDistrict
#18It Chapter two
Posted: 9/8/19 at 7:47pm

I’d definitely recommend the new movies over the miniseries, not only because it’s superior as AEA mentioned, but because that’s the one that most people will have seen and be talking about now. I also recommend reading the book. It’s too long and can get extremely bizarre (it’s Stephen King, after all), but it’s entertaining and worth the time if you are into horror.

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TheGingerBreadMan
#19It Chapter two
Posted: 9/8/19 at 8:31pm

Add me to the camp that really enjoyed the film.

Impossible2
#20It Chapter two
Posted: 9/9/19 at 7:22pm

SouthernCakes said: "So I hate clowns. But I’m finally ready to watch IT. Should I start with the modern adaption or the older movie? Which is closer to the book?"

The original is an unwatchable mess without the benefit of nostalgia on your side so go for the new ones.

 

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spiderdj82
#21It Chapter two
Posted: 9/16/19 at 12:52pm

I've seen it twice now and I have to say I really liked it.  I think there were pacing issues and the actor that played older Eddie got on my nerves because he was OBVIOUSLY doing an impression of the kid that played the younger Eddie (and he even admits to trying to capture his energy).   Plus I really wish they would have just taken out the Henry Bower stuff as it just seemed tacked on and did absolutely nothing for the movie.  At least in the book you got to see how he was used by Pennywise to taunt and go after the adult losers.  In the movie.......there was just too much going on to give him a proper arc. 

Plus the CGI was a mess.  It was forgivable in the first movie since the budge was low but with it making over $700 million in the box office they could have upped the look of the CGI creations.

But, other than that I really enjoyed it and thought it was a great companion to the first film (which is the superior of the two).   

I can't wait to see the 4 hour directors cut when it comes out on dvd to see what all was missed. 


"They're eating her and then they're going to eat me. OH MY GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOD!!!!" -Troll 2
Updated On: 9/16/19 at 12:52 PM