By
Jonas Schwartz
Evil
oozes through Derry, Maine. Not just one evil, but a sewage of cruelty
permeates the town. The decent ones face abusive dads, sadistic bullies, vile
mean girls and death on every corner.
The Chamber of Commerce is worth every penny if people continue to
populate this death trap. For at the center of the madness, a malevolent being
tracks your worst fears and turns them to realities, feeding off dread and
delighting in ripping little children to shreds.
Pennywise
the Clown (Bill Skarsgård), the main incarnation of the beast, is Stephen
King's brutal joke to childhood. The new film, directed by Andy Muschietti
(Mama), plays the audience like a cacophony of terror. Though it could be
tighter, Stephen King's IT is still a funhouse of a film.
Based
on King's 1986 epic novel (at 1138 pages, it is still one of his longest
books), seven adolescent outcasts form a bond while fighting brutal monsters
both human and supernatural. Though the sheriff's son Henry Bowers (Nicholas
Hamilton) is a psychopath, who carves his name in little kid's bodies, he's no
match for the spectral creature who haunts the town. Though IT can turn into
any manifestation, he takes gruesome glee in inhabiting the dancing clown, Pennywise.
The de facto leader of the "losers," Bill (Jaeden Lieberher), has
already suffered devastating loss when, a year before, his baby brother
disappeared. Now he gathers his friends to destroy the menace who plagues their
town.
Muschiette
and his writers Chase Palmer, Cary Fukunaga, and Gary Dauberman, take liberties
with the book, most that do not damage the substance. Primarily,
IT has been broken into two
films. The first, which is currently being released, focuses on Bill and his
teenage friends as they first encounter IT. The second film, to be released in
a few years, will cross-cut between the children and their adult selves 27
years later. The film also forwards the timeline to 1988-89, so that the second
phase will be in modern times. The novel introduced us to the kids living
through the late 1950s.
The
film also escalates a supporting character's death to the first section and
gives victims' families no closure by keeping all the children corpses in the
sewers so that no one can be sure their relative has died. That includes our
hero Bill, whose brother Georgie is still considered missing, even though the
audience witnessed his violent murder in the prologue.
ABC-TV
produced a popular mini-series in the early nineties that followed the book's
essence, but it still had the limitations of network television regarding
budget and violence. In the current rendition, Muschiette smartly utilizes his
big budget tools to set the movie's mood.
Visually,
IT is a gripping slice-and-dice of
Americana. Cinematographer Chung-hoon Chung floods the film with light, which
is usually blocked by impediments, including streams of light that push through
wooden barricades and a deluge of sun beating through a stain glass Jewish star
in a synagogue office. The picket fences and soft focus seem more rooted in the
original book's era of 1959, but the film does a good job of placing the story
in the late eighties, with baggy clothes, mullets, and people already anchored
to their televisions at all times.
The
look for Pennywise differs greatly from the family make-up worn by Tim Curry in
the original TV film. Curry was superbly horrifying in the 90s, but the current
make-up artists reshape the clown's face to resemble a king cobra, with
protruding teeth and a forehead the size of Montana. In the opening gutter
scene, his eyes don't glow in the dark as much as shine brightly, causing a
menacing effect. Some of the other creatures are less haunting, particularly
the leper who frightens young asthmatic Eddie (Jack Dylan Grazer), who looks
like he wandered off The Walking Dead set seeking a diet
coke. The score by Benjamin Wallfisch captures the childlike innocence of being
13-years-old during summer vacation while quickly melding into creepy horror
motifs on a moment's notice.
The
film's weakest element is the drawn-out editing and pacing which dissipates
some of the tension. Many scares are repeated. Several scenes could have been
cut down. A two hour and fifteen-minute horror movie is not an issue, a two
hour and fifteen-minute horror movie that felt three hours is a problem.
Also,
in horror, rules are essential. Even if characters don't know how to kill a
beast, the audience must have some understanding, but in this film, the rules
on injuring the ethereal monster are vague. Plus, though a character explains
that IT returns to cause havoc every 27 years, it's unclear how long he can
stay active. Is it exactly a year, a year and two days, etc.? Without that
countdown, there's no ticking time bomb to pump up the suspense. He seems to
evaporate just because the credits are ready to roll.
Muschiette's
strongest asset is his cast. Skarsgård is playful, taunting the kids as a cat
would with mice, and frighteningly ferocious. The kids' chemistry is remarkable
for a group of mostly newcomers. Lieberher, who had been captivating in a
mostly silent role in Midnight Special, is the perfect
anchor for IT, identifiable to anyone who suffered through high school as a
runt of the litter. Finn Wolfhard, who won over audiences as the leader of
another band of kids in Netflix's Stranger Things, is appropriately
aggravating as the jokester Richie. Wyatt Oleff as the skittish Stan and Grazer
as the invalid Eddie are vulnerable, making the audience fear for their safety.
Jeremy Ray Taylor is heartbreaking as the heavy-set Ben, who harbors a deep
love for the solo girl, Bev (Sophia Lillis). Lillis is the breakout star.
Playing a sexually abused but defiant girl, who faces her fears every day,
Lillis reveals layers of pain and empowerment.
Stephen
King's IT will
be a divisive film, particularly to the Generation X who read the book when it
first came out and crawled under the covers on the Sunday night in November
when Tim Curry and his red balloon first told little Georgie he'd float too.
And though the film suffers from issues that a more experienced director may
have reigned in, Muschiette's youthfulness perfectly sets the stage for Stephen
King's ode to youth in peril.
Jonas Schwartz is a voting member of the Los Angeles Drama Critics, and the West Coast Critic for TheaterMania. Check out his “Jonas at the Movies” reviews at Maryland Nightlife.
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