Friday, October 14, 2011

Stephen King's It

(1990) ***1/2


I was aware that my quest to become an evil clown know-it-all would lead me face to face with Pennywise. So in the middle of September I downloaded and devoured the 45 hour audiobook of It to put me in the proper state of mind before taking on the movie. I assumed it would be easy (and fun!) to hate on an adaptation of a beloved horror novel. I was wrong.

Miraculously Stephen King’s It overcame the nearly insurmountable obstacle of using 2nd string sitcom actors in a made-for-frickin'-TV miniseries and it somehow managed to tell the tale in a compelling and effective manner. Most impressive was the fact that director Tommy Lee Wallace (Halloween III: Season of the Witch) pulled this off in 1990, arguably the worst year of all time for horror films. A quick glance at the movies that were released that year reveals a pee stream of scareless garbage including a veritable who’s-who of generic assembly line sequels. Child’s Play 2, Texas Chainsaw 3, Psycho 4 and The Exorcist 3 all mark the embarrassing low points of their respective franchises. But enough about 1990.

“It” refers to a shape shifting evil life form that resides in the fictional small town of Derry, Maine. Frequently appearing in the form of iconic evil clown Pennywise, It preys primarily on children by using their beliefs and fears against them. Every 30 years or so It reappears and leaves a vicious string of deaths in its wake. Tim Curry proved himself worthy of donning Pennywise’s giant shoes and embodies everything an evil clown should strive to be – unpredictable, cunning and malicious. My worry that the book's sense of dread would be neutered by network television evaporated in the very first scene where Pennywise lured an adorable child to his death by dismemberment in a storm drain. Children are so gullible!

Kids: what do they know about life?

Two stories unfold 30 years apart. The first focuses on a group of seven prepubescent social outcasts who name themselves the Loser’s Club. After being picked on by sadistic local boy Henry Bowers and his cronies, they band together for protection and subsequently form a lifelong bond. (Actually “picked on” is too gentle - psychologically and physically tortured is much more appropriate.) These losers also use their collective strength to identify, confront and eventually defeat It... for the time being. Three decades later the group reunites after receiving word that the killings have begun again. Putting their real lives on hold, they will either dispose of It once and for all or die trying.

Condensing an epic 1,142 page novel into a coherent 3 hour miniseries was no easy feat. Naturally sacrifices had to be made. The rich and terrifying history of the town were reduced to a couple of short segments. The intricate back stories of the seven protagonists were merely hinted at or omitted altogether. Major themes and story arcs were whittled down into nothingness. The grossly inappropriate pre-teen gang bang was also noticeably absent. But fortunately the book’s most memorable moments and key plot points were preserved.

The children (including a young Seth Green) were well cast but the adult leads don't quite measure up. John Ritter as former fat kid Ben was a welcome surprise but the guy from Night Court's portrayal of wisecracking Richie was decidedly unwelcome. While I'm complaining - the decision to give stuttering Bill the sensitive pony tail man treatment was truly tragic but hey, it was 1990 so we'll forgive that too.

The biggest drawback is the final half hour which fails to culminate in a satisfying or even explainable way. If you haven't read the book then it will appear as though it was whimsically conceived. The cringe-worthy special effects do not help.

The breakdown:

Scariness: **
Transition from book to movie: **1/2
Overall entertainment factor: ***1/2
Evil clowniness: ****

16 comments:

Catfreeek said...

I'm so glad you reviewed this. I agree on all points, Tim Curry really nailed that role too, he made everything wrong seem alright.

DKC said...

Excellent! This makes me want to read the book and see the movie again. I enjoyed both, although the cheesiness added in the end of the movie turned me off a bit - I agree that overall they did a good job.

Tim Curry rocks.

AC said...

have read the book but never saw the movie; this review makes the latter sound more palatable than i would have guessed. the casting sounds fun too.

Crystal Math said...

Friggin' sweet review! I'm glad you took your precious time composing this review. It's a gem.

Johnny Sweatpants said...

Thanks Crystal, this review was hanging over me like a noose!

Regarding the audiobook - I generally only listen to non-fiction but because time was of the essence I gave It a shot. It was narrated by the guy who played Jack Torrance in the TV miniseries version of The Shining. He did a great job for the most part but the one thing that really, really, really annoyed me was the way he made stuttering Bill sound mentally retarded. By the time I hit the 45 hour mark I just wanted the character dead because of it.

JPX said...

Wow, I can't believe you tackled this - what an excellent review! I love this line,

"Child’s Play 2, Texas Chainsaw 3, Psycho 4 and The Exorcist 3 all mark the embarrassing low points of their respective franchises. But enough about 1990."

How true!

I thought the prepubescent gangbang in the book was very disturbing and it caused me to wonder, is King a pedophile? I don't recall details about the movie at all but I'm not surprised that the ending was a disappointment. I have found that King generally disappoints when it comes to creating satisfying endings to his larger novels. I think he's more hit than miss but there have been a few times that I waded through 800-1000 pages only to be totally let down.

Crystal Math said...

JPX -- Having read a couple of King novels I have the disturbing suspicion that he plays upon any kind of terror done onto others, including sexuality. Vulnerability is a powerful tool of fear.

But I'm not saying any of it is excusable.

Abduscias said...

"oh yes georgie, they float, they all float down here. and when you're down here YOU'LL FLOAT TOO!"

50PageMcGee said...

dude, this is an outstanding review and i couldn't agree more with everything -- except...are we really going to place Exorcist III *lower* on the totem pole than Exorcist II?).

"Pee stream of scareless garbage" -- that is some visionary shit.

Carm said...

The ending to that movie was terrible.

Landshark said...

Nice work, JSP. I remember really liking that book back in high school. Also remember ditching an evening class (American Lit I) during college to catch the miniseries with another King fanatic. It's been 20 years, but I think you've captured my feeling on the miniseries quite well!

Jordan said...

He's not a pedophile. However, while writing It (and everything from that period including Tommyknockers, Misery, Eyes of the Dragon etc.) he was a tremendous cokehead.

What does this have to do with it? Give Stephen King a lot of cocaine and he goes into "I can write EVEN FASTER" mode, churning out material like a man possessed. I firmly believe that the weird gang-bang ending to IT is a product of his 4AM perfervid up-three-nights-to-finish-the-book mental state...he just went off in this crazy direction and didn't worry about it. Within the narrow context of the scenes in question it KIND OF makes sense and you can KIND OF see what he's getting at, but I believe that a drug-free King would have calmed down and come up with something better.

Octopunk said...

Wow, what an amazing review. Big props to you for tackling the book as prep, too. BIG props, that's doing your homework.

Pee stream... enough about 1990... pre-teen gang bang -- all these are quotes I would've pulled for praise if others hadn't already. Great stuff.

In anticipation of reading your review, I was thinking about the book, and the pre-teen gang bang crossed my mind. I recall when reading it thinking it was horribly lame: everybody in the gang has a special talent, and hers was having girl parts? Weak. The coke sounds like a good explanation.

Johnny Sweatpants said...

I'm sufficiently satisfied with Jordan's cocaine explanation!

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