Andy Muschietti’s It floats on a delicate balance: it’s a monster movie with a wicked grin and the soft heart of a coming-of-age story that accidentally wandered into a sewer. The miracle is how gracefully it juggles terror, tenderness, and gallows humor. Yes, Pennywise bites—frequently—but what lingers is the Losers’ Club, whose friendship glows like a nightlight against the darkness. It’s scary enough to make you jump and warm enough to make you stay. Bring popcorn. Maybe a raincoat.
A Killer Prologue (Literally)
The opening with Georgie and that doomed paper boat isn’t just effective; it’s ruthless. Muschietti stages the scene like a fairy tale gone feral—soft colors, soft voice, and then a soft child minus a limb. Bill Skarsgård’s Pennywise arrives with the politeness of a children’s party clown and the appetite of a garbage disposal. It’s a mission statement: this isn’t nostalgia for nostalgia’s sake. Childhood is magical, sure—but magic tricks always end with something vanishing.
The Losers Win Your Heart
This ensemble is improbably perfect. Jaeden Lieberher’s Bill leads with grief as his compass; Sophia Lillis’s Beverly is all bruised courage and brighter-than-red hair; Finn Wolfhard’s Richie weaponizes sarcasm like bear spray. Jack Dylan Grazer’s Eddie, Wyatt Oleff’s Stan, Chosen Jacobs’s Mike, and Jeremy Ray Taylor’s Ben round out a crew so lovable you want to adopt them, or at least buy them bikes with better brakes. Their chemistry sells the film: friendship becomes armor, and wisecracks become shields.
Pennywise: The Smile That Eats
Skarsgård’s Pennywise is a masterpiece of wrongness. The eyes wander, the smile curdles, and the voice slides from carnival barker to sewer siren. He’s not Tim Curry’s vaudevillian demon, nor a CGI goblin hiding in the shadows; this clown thirsts for the spotlight. Like every terrible entertainer, he doesn’t wait to be invited—he crashes the show, chews the scenery, and then chews, well, everything else. If he offers you popcorn, decline. It’s probably fingers.
Derry: A Town Built on Quiet Screams
Production design turns Derry into the prettiest crime scene in America. Norman Rockwell postcards line streets that conceal rot: missing-kid flyers flutter like seasonal décor, and adults look away with Olympic skill. The Barrens feel mythic—part clubhouse, part battleground. There’s an ache under the summer sunshine; you can almost hear the town humming, “We’ve always done it this way,” as if apathy itself were a civic tradition. Horror here isn’t an interruption; it’s infrastructure.
Set Pieces with Sharp Teeth
From Beverly’s bathroom geyser of blood to the Neibolt Street funhouse of dread, the film delivers showcases that feel handcrafted. Muschietti favors practical textures and tactile menace: peeling wallpaper, clotted sinks, a fridge that opens the wrong way because it learned manners from a demon. The camera glides, then sprints, then lunges. Jumps are earned, not rented. Even when CGI arrives, it’s in service of a sensation—fear that expands until it can’t fit in your ribcage.
Scares Served with Snark
Dark humor keeps the terror buoyant. Richie’s one-liners land like relief valves, hissing out tension without deflating stakes. The script understands that kids cope by joking—especially when a Victorian murder mime is trying to eat them. The funniest moments aren’t gaggy; they’re recognizably adolescent: trash talk, bike-ride bravado, the bravest “this is fine” in cinema. If you were ever thirteen and convinced nothing could hurt you, congratulations—you were wrong, but at least you were funny.
Blood Oath, Beating Heart
Beneath the teeth, the movie’s pulse is pure coming-of-age. Each Loser wrestles a personal demon—abuse, grief, control, loneliness—and the shape-shifter simply weaponizes those fears. That structure gives the horror resonance; defeating Pennywise means practicing emotional CPR on yourself. The blood oath isn’t edgy cosplay; it’s a declaration that love—messy, awkward, unstoppable—binds tighter than fear. If Pennywise feeds on isolation, the Losers starve him with community. (Therapists everywhere nod approvingly.)
Wallfisch’s Lullaby of Dread
Benjamin Wallfisch’s score isn’t content to goose you; it haunts you. Melodies tilt between wonder and menace like a seesaw with a ghost on one end. There’s the choral hush for deadlights, the adventurous swell for bike chases, and the quiet ache for Bill’s grief. It’s the sound of childhood memories you can’t trust—sweet until you realize the ice cream truck plays in a minor key. If you stream it after dark, that’s on you.
Nostalgia, Rewired for Nerves
This isn’t a Stranger-Things-ification of King; it’s a respectful remix. Muschietti borrows the era’s textures—posters, bikes, arcades—but refuses to let warm fuzzies dull the blade. The ’80s aren’t a safety blanket; they’re a time capsule of denial, bullying, and institutional shrugging. The film’s most retro quality is its faith in character. Plot moves forward because kids do, stumbling toward bravery like rookies learning to swim in a storm drain. Dog-paddle if you must; just move.
Craft in the Gutter
Technically, the movie is shockingly elegant for a story about a murder clown. Chung-hoon Chung’s cinematography finds beauty in mildew; editing trusts pauses to curdle; sound design makes the sewer breathe like a sleeping beast. Even the gore has… style. Not tasteful—let’s not get weird—but purposeful. When doors labeled “Not Scary,” “Scary,” and “Very Scary” appear, the film winks without blinking. It knows the genre’s haunted house rules and plays them like a warped calliope.
Losers, but Only in Name
Each kid earns a spotlight beat. Ben’s research turns him into the librarian Indiana Jones of Derry. Beverly weaponizes compassion as deftly as she wields that sink handle. Eddie learns the terror of outgrowing your mother’s anxieties. Stan confronts order’s collapse. Mike shoulders history’s weight. Richie discovers that talking big sometimes means being big. Bill, the ghost in his own home, finds language when it matters. Together, they assemble into a single organism called Courage.
Pennywise, the Stand-Up Cannibal
Let’s be honest: part of Pennywise’s power is comic timing. He pops out like a deranged jack-in-the-box, then holds the beat just long enough for you to realize you should have left the theater for a bathroom break three minutes ago. Skarsgård plays him as an apex predator of attention—the world’s worst children’s entertainer, who murders the room and then murders the room. If laughter and screaming are cousins, Pennywise is the relative you don’t invite to reunions.
The Ending Floats (And So Do We)
The sewer showdown is grandly grotesque: a cathedral of lost childhoods where fear floats like rotten confetti. The Losers’ victory isn’t about bigger weapons; it’s about smaller lies. They stop surrendering to the stories fear tells—about being weak, dirty, unlovable—and the monster shrinks accordingly. When Bill finally says goodbye to Georgie, it’s devastating and cleansing, like lancing a wound you’ve pretended wasn’t there. Healing hurts; growth does, too. Both beat getting eaten.
A Promise Worth Keeping
The blood-oath coda lands like a bell tolling into the future. We know what’s coming (hello, Chapter Two), but the promise works on its own: when evil returns—as it always does—we return for each other. The film doesn’t end on triumph so much as commitment. Childhood fades; terror hibernates; friendship, if we’re lucky, endures. It’s the rare horror movie that sends you out rattled and weirdly hopeful. Bring Band-Aids for your feelings.
Final Verdict: We All Float, Together
It is crowd-pleasing without pandering, scary without sadism, funny without flippancy. It remembers that horror is a team sport: we gasp, we laugh, we squeeze the armrest, and somewhere between a bike ride and a blood oath, we grow up a little. If Pennywise is the clown of consumption, the Losers are the punchline that refuses to die. This isn’t just one of the best Stephen King adaptations; it’s one of the best arguments for facing monsters with friends—and better jokes.
