For any fan of IT: Chapter Two, these are some fun facts that'll hopefully float your boat.
The sci-fi film could learn a lot from the Stephen King adaptation made from a novel split in half.
A great scare scene in Stephen King sequel IT Chapter Two paid homage to John Carpenter's 1982 sci-fi/horror classic The Thing, in a very cool way.
Primarily comedic actor Bill Hader may have seemed like an odd choice to play Richie in IT Chapter Two to some, but here's why he landed the role.
In IT Chapter Two, Pennywise cruelly uses Georgie's form to taunt Bill about his brother's death with the phrase "you lied and I died."
She's only onscreen for a minute, but IT Chapter Two reveals that Eddie Kaspbarak went on to marry a woman exactly like his mother, literally.
Horror sequel IT Chapter Two isn't as good as the original, and a big factor is its inconsistent tone, which wildly swings from horror to comedy.
IT Chapter Two tries to spin the reveal of Stan's suicide note into a touching moment, but in doing so, fails the character and sends a bad message.
Be aware there are SPOILERS for IT, IT Chapter TWO and Stephen King's original novel below. Stephen King's IT is a beast. A massive horror epic that spans decades, embraces a vast ensemble of characters, details the sprawling history of Derry, Maine, and dips a toe in mind-bending cosmic mythology, the exact details of the novel were never going to make it to the screen, even with two long feature films. Director Andy Muschietti and screenwriter Gary Dauberman had to do a lot of trimming to transform King's classic story into a two-part tale -- even …
From Freddy's glove in Evil Dead 2 to pretty much everything in Scream, horror movies have a long history of Easter eggs, cameos, and meta-self-reference. And in Andy Muschietti's IT Chapter Two, that spirit is alive and well in a film that's as much a love-letter to IT and Stephen King as it is an epic followup to the 2017 horror movie sensation. The first film had a few book callouts for fans to enjoy, but with his sequel, Muschietti has taken things to the next level. "In every corner, there’s an Easter …
Pennywise is back and more vicious than ever before in IT Chapter Two, director Andy Muschietti's followup to his record-smashing 2017 adaptation of Stephen King's IT. Set up 27 years after the events of the first film, Chapter Two picks up with the adult Losers club -- James McAvoy's Bill Denbrough, Jessica Chastain's Beverly Marsh, Bill Hader's Richie Tozier, Jay Ryan's Ben Hanscom, James Ransone's Eddie Kaspbrak, Isaiah Mustafah's Mike Hanlon and Andy Bean's Stanley Uris -- when the child-eating creature known as It returns from slumber with a rather literal …
IT's Losers' Club was recast with adults for sequel IT Chapter Two, but oddly enough, one character is played by the same actor in both timelines.
Four reasons why the hate crime that opens IT Chapter Two is vital, including its connection to Richie, establishing stakes and ties to the real world
The biggest horror movie of the year is headed to home video and, fortunately, IT Chapter Two is arriving on 4K and Blu-ray with some special features worth checking out. Most importantly, a director's commentary! Sadly, the Blu-ray commentary -- aka, free film school -- is a dying art these days, but if you want to know what goes into a big-budget studio horror, this should be a good one. Director Andy Muschietti will provide the commentary on the 4K and Blu-ray (not included on the DVD), and in case you forgot, IT Chapter Two is a …
Joker is firmly outpacing the recent R-rated box office presales of such films as IT Chapter Two, and remains set to break Venom's October record.
It: Chapter Two is a big movie. Not just in terms of running time, but in terms of narrative scope. It bridges a gap between scenes set in the 1980s with an ensemble of young actors and scenes set in present day, with an entirely different adult cast. On top of that you have Bill Skarsgard’s iconic villain Pennywise, who takes many forms as he terrorizes the Losers’ Club in two different time periods. And if you ask the film’s cinematographer Checco Varese what it was like to shoot a film as complex and massive as this, he …
It: Chapter Two is a big movie. Not just in terms of running time, but in terms of narrative scope. It bridges a gap between scenes set in the 1980s with an ensemble of young actors and scenes set in present day, with an entirely different adult cast. On top of that you have Bill Skarsgard’s iconic villain Pennywise, who takes many forms as he terrorizes the Losers’ Club in two different time periods. And if you ask the film’s cinematographer Checco Varese what it was like to shoot a film as complex and massive as this, he …