A faithful adaptation of Stephen King’s 1986 novel “It” has
been a long time coming. Of course, there was the two-part miniseries that aired
on network television in 1990, and though it hasn’t aged particularly well and was
constrained from delving into most of the visceral terror described in King’s
book, the series has its fans and Tim Curry’s performance as the evil clown
Pennywise has become something of a cult-horror icon. The development of the
first true cinematic adaptation of this novel has finally been realized by
Argentinian director Andy Muschietti and with the help of New Line Cinema, this
adaptation finally has the budget and the R-rating that it needs to realize this story
with more creative freedom.
King has never been known for his brevity, but “It” stands
as one of his largest and most ambitious works, containing over a thousand
pages describing a group of bullied pre-teens who have to band together to kill
the monster that’s been terrorizing their town of Derry, Maine. The book first
tells the story of how the self-branded Losers Club meet while on their summer
vacation, and then it revisits these same characters 27 years later, when they
are forced to return to their hometown to once again destroy the evil entity
they once thought was destroyed. For obvious reasons, Muschietti has decided to
cut the story in half and streamline the remains, only concerning himself with
the Loser’s as a kids, setting up a sequel for the adult half. Here he does his best to balance their
childhood traumas with that of their confrontations with the demented clown.
A group of child actors can always be mixed bag of performances
and acting styles, but luckily for Muschietti, this cast has been assembled
with care. Their reactions to the movie’s horrific imagery, as well as their perceived
comradery as outsiders and friends is perfectly pitched. We’ve seen Jaeden
Lieberher before in pictures such as “St. Vincent” and last year’s “Midnight
Special,” but his performance here as Bill Denbrough steps up to the emotional
weight of the character whose still mourning the murder of his younger brother
Georgie. Finn Wolfhard, of the very King-esq Netflix series “Stranger Things,”
also turns in a great performance as Richie, the group’s wise-cracker. The rest
of the cast is a little less familiar, with Jeremy Ray Taylor as the overweight library geek Ben, Chosen Jacobs as the racially-targeted Mike, Wyett Oleff as the
nervous Stanley, Jack Dylan Grazer as the hypochondriac Eddie, and Sophia
Lillis as tough but fragile Beverly Marsh. The screenplay wisely gives each
character enough screen time to build the necessary empathy and to underline
the story’s dominant metaphors about over-coming childhood trauma.
As a horror film, this is somewhat conventional, but scary
enough. Bill Skarsgard’s turn as Pennywise finds a delicate balance between
mystery and menace, though it’s sometimes apparent that Muschietti leans into
the devilish clown when he doesn’t know how else to build tension in a scene.
As such, the more Pennywise is on screen the less we’re afraid of him. The
scares are creative and sometimes intentionally blackly humorous—bringing to
mind New Line’s flagship horror icon Freddy Krueger--but the film’s pacing, largely
dictated by how and where the screenplay decides to skip around King’s tome of
a novel, becomes repetitive and episodic towards the movie’s extended second
act. All the important scenes are touched on and the book’s themes are still
intact, but the rhythm of the film feels oddly metronomic and mechanical. The
scares, while individually effective, sometimes cry for variation throughout.
As an adaptation, “It” has its problems, some structural,
some tonal, but overall this is an imaginative and evocative horror film. What
makes it stand outside of usual ghostly chiller that’s retreaded every year is
the attention paid to its characters and their relatable woes as outsiders. The
bullies and many of the adult roles lack the same amount of depth, but
Muschietti’s sensitivity for his primary cast elevates and informs the movie’s
broader monster shocks.
Grade: B
Originally Published in the Idaho State Journal/Sep-2017
Listen to this week's episode of Jabber and the Drone to hear more conversation about "It."
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