Geelong Advertiser

Remake proves positively scary

- IT Starring:

Jaeden Lieberher, Finn Wolfhard, Sophia Lillis, Bill Skarsgard No more clowning around. ARE you scared of clowns?

It’s nothing to be ashamed of — Bozo has been making a lot of people a little uneasy for a long while, and the blame can be laid squarely at the feet of bestsellin­g horror author Stephen King.

Well, not just him. Actor Tim Curry is also culpable, thanks to his iconic performanc­e as sinister supernatur­al clown Pennywise in the 1990 TV miniseries based on King’s novel It.

Playing the embodiment of an evil force — the It of the title — that terrorised the children of a small US town, Curry apparently ruined clowns for an entire generation.

The rest of the It miniseries, however, couldn’t really match the actor’s creepy clowning, which was too bad because It is one of King’s most ambitious, substantia­l, harrowing and haunting works.

Long in the planning stages, a new adaptation of the novel is now lurching its way into cinemas. So, does it do It justice? Well, kind of. This is a terrific mainstream horror movie, the kind that’ll have viewers gasping in shock and grasping for their significan­t other when the slow-building tension suddenly erupts into a well-staged scare.

Watching It is not unlike riding the best rollercoas­ter at the amusement park (actually, maybe the best ghost train is a better analogy).

Having said that, a fair bit of the material that made King’s novel so skin-crawling — the subplots about It’s malignant influence on the town, the subtext about the commonplac­e horror that coexisted alongside the supernatur­al horror — has been trimmed away in this adaptation.

But what remains is a truly captivatin­g story about a bunch of outcast kids finding strength in their friendship and purpose in their mission to destroy the evil preying on their town and its youngest, most vulnerable residents.

Every 27 years, something rises from the sewers running under the town of Derry to feed on any child unfortunat­e enough to cross its path.

While it can take many forms, it seems most comfortabl­e in the skin of dancing clown Pennywise (Bill Skarsgard, who has a nicely weird array of leers and hisses).

For Bill (Jaeden Lieberher), the leader of the self-dubbed “Losers’ Club” — which includes hypochondr­iac Eddie (Jack Dylan Grazer), wisecracki­ng Richie (Finn Wolfhard) and brave Beverly (Sophia Lillis) — finding and killing Pennywise is personal, because the clown lured his little brother to his death.

Together, the members of the Losers’ Club will face their fears to end It’s reign of terror before it disappears again. And they’ll do so without the help of adults, who either don’t believe or don’t care.

These young characters are so wellwritte­n and well-performed it’s a pleasure watching them simply hang out.

But it’s a downright thrill when they unite against a common enemy.

 ??  ?? Finn Wolfhard.
Finn Wolfhard.
 ??  ?? CREEPY CHARACTER: Bill Skarsgard plays the clown Pennywise in the latest version of It.
CREEPY CHARACTER: Bill Skarsgard plays the clown Pennywise in the latest version of It.

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