Loughborough Echo

FEARS OF A CLOWN

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IN an early scene of director Andy Muschietti’s over-long return to the highest-grossing horror film of all time, an emotionall­y crippled character – a novelist turned screenwrit­er – becomes the butt of a running joke about his inability to write a satisfying ending.

Stephen King, who cameos in the sequel as the proprietor of a musty antiques store, weathered similar criticism for the resolution to his 1986 book, It.

Screenwrit­er Gary Dauberman doesn’t stray far from the well-trodden path of the source text and condemns It Chapter Two to a fantastica­l final flourish that will come as a relief to audiences who have slogged through more than two-and-ahalf hours of on-screen calamity.

The opening sequence – a brutal and unflinchin­g hate crime – is the stuff of modern-day nightmares and sends a

shudder of fear down the spine that ripples deliciousl­y as grown-up incarnatio­ns of the characters are drawn back to the fictional town of Derry in Maine.

Sins of the past echo cruelly in the present for one victim of domestic violence and a diabolical predator preys on a little girl’s insecuriti­es about her looks with scalpel-like precision.

Once the reluctant heroes divide to conquer their fears, tension dissipates and the running time becomes a test of endurance despite sterling performanc­es from a teary-eyed Jessica Chastain and James McAvoy.

It has been 27 years since the sweltering summer of 1989 when teenage members of the Losers Club – Ben Hanscom (Jeremy Ray Taylor), Beverly Marsh (Sophia Lillis), Bill Denbrough (Jaeden Lieberher), Eddie Kaspbrak ( Jack Dylan Grazer), Mike Hanlon (Chosen Jacobs), Richie Tozier (Finn Wolfhard) and Stanley Uris (Wyatt Oleff) – banded together to defeat Pennywise the clown (Bill Skarsgard).

“If it isn’t dead, if it comes back, we come back too,” declares Bill to the rest of the gang.

Hellish history repeats in 2016 and Mike (now played by Isaiah Mustafa), who has remained in Derry as the town’s librarian, summons other members of the Losers Club to revisit their darkest nightmare.

Ben ( Jay Ryan), Beverly (Chastain), Bill (McAvoy), Eddie ( James Ransone), Richie (Bill Hader) and Stanley (Andy Bean) take his call, their memories of the past wiped in the intervenin­g years.

Punctuated by myriad flashbacks, It Chapter Two could comfortabl­y excise 30 minutes of dramatic fat to quicken the pace of a sluggish second act.

The shock value of the sequel’s nerve-jangling centrepiec­e – Beverly’s visit to her childhood home – is dulled by its prominent inclusion in a teaser trailer.

Skarsgard’s rictus grin still unsettles and there is no denying the queasy relevance of King’s narrative, which warns against mob mentality in a society riven by scare-mongering and intoleranc­e.

Any residual coulrophob­ia - fear of clowns - is comfortabl­y cured, however, in between nervous glances at watches and perhaps a stifled yawn.

 ??  ?? Older and wiser: Bill Hader as Richie, Jessica Chastain as Beverly, James McAvoy as Bill, James Ransone as Eddie, Isaiah Mustafa as Mike and Jay Ryan as Ben When you’ve got to go... Beverly takes a bathroom break from the terror Bill Skarsgard as Pennywise
Older and wiser: Bill Hader as Richie, Jessica Chastain as Beverly, James McAvoy as Bill, James Ransone as Eddie, Isaiah Mustafa as Mike and Jay Ryan as Ben When you’ve got to go... Beverly takes a bathroom break from the terror Bill Skarsgard as Pennywise

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