Sunday, July 14, 2013

IT

had to put this one out for the remakes coming. I feel Tim Curry is the only one that can do Pennywise for a remake must keep him.


it free to watch on you tube many parts. I say watch it for the coming out remake may make it not free.

When the small New England town of Derry is plagued by a series of child murders, the police are baffled and the local adults terrified. What they don't know is that the malevolent force that's killing the town's youths isn't human but a destructive force out to feed…and seemingly nothing can stop it. That is, until a band of rag tag outcasts show up to put a dent in "Its" midnight feeding! Each child has seen the monster (it takes the shape of what they're scared of) and also in its hidden form of a malicious clown named Pennywise (Tim Curry). With a lot of bravery, the kids are able to stop the evil "It" in the sewers beneath their quaint little town.

Thirty years later, Mike Hanlon (Reid), the only child from the group to stay in Derry, begins to see another rash of murders and quickly deduces that "It" is back. Without haste, he calls upon his childhood friends to help stop the terror once and for all. In a flash the old gang is back in Derry, including funny guy Richard (Anderson); the asthmatic Eddie Kasprak (Christopher); the only female of the group Beverly (O'Toole); the once chunky Benjamin (Ritter); and the stuttering Bill (Thomas), whose brother was killed years ago by "It." As the group reforms their bond, they'll need everything inside them to face down Pennywise and defeat their darkest fears…
Stephen King's IT Remake – A Return to Absolute Terror
Stephen King is known as the Master of Fear, and he has been terrifying people for a very long time with his writing talent.  King has written such frightening books as Carrie, Cujo, Pet Sematary, and many more books that will give anyone who reads them nightmares. However, one of King’s books that really ranks high on the fear meter is a book about a clown gone bad called IT.   In 1990, a television movie came out about this terrifying clown, and the movie starred Annette O’Toole, Seth Green, John Ritter, and Tim Curry as the infamous clown, Pennywise.  Now over two decades later, Warner Brothers has decided to remake Stephen King’s chilling classic tale of good versus evil. 
Imagine the horror of seeing Pennywise the Clown on thebig screen?  Unlike the 1990 version, this remake of IT will be in theaters.  When it comes to remakes, many people are against it because they are such huge fans of the original. Can anyone truly play Pennywise the Clown the way Tim Curry did?  However, Warner Brothers has promised that the IT remake will be just as frightening as the first one and it will be as close to the Stephen King bestselling book as possible. 
Why remake IT?  Anyone that has read the book and then seen the 1990 movie can tell you that the movie itself was terrifying, so why mess with something that was already done?  The answer to the question of why remake IT is quite simple, the technology is better now than it was back in 1990 when the first movie was done.  Computers have impacted the way that movies are made now, so with even better technology, the IT remake is guaranteed to be even more terrifying than the original.
Whenever you hear the words movie remake, you immediately feel the need to cringe.  You get images in your head of beloved movies being redone, and possible in the worst ways imaginable.  Warner Brothers has decided to take the Stephen King movie, IT and remake it.  Though the idea of this remake can worry you, the film studio has promised that IT will be just as scary as King’s novel and the 1990 movie.  Over twenty years has passed since IT came out as a movie, and now with the newest movie-making technology, the remake of this classic is  sure to be a terrifying movie experience. 
Stephen King's classic horror-suspense novel It, is about to hit our screens with a remake. Yes that's right an It remake! Many would have read the horror of Pennywise the scary clown and now cinemas and theaters will be gearing up for a remake which looks likely to be made in a two-part adaption. You may be thinking this has already been done before? Indeed in 1990, John Ritter and Seth Green starred with Tim Curry clowning around perfectly cast for the role of Pennywise. 

The It remake news grapevine says that Warner Brothers are the Hollywood film makers and sponsors for the latest venture which will use top horror director Cary Fukunaga in the chair. Roy Lee and Dave Katzenberg are about to form the production team. Naturally it is hoped that Stephen King fans will see the remake of the novel kept as close and true to the book as possible. The excitement is certainly mounting as many classic novels have been made into movies during the eighties and nineties, only for them to have to be remade again in the 21st Century as technology andcomputer graphics made substantial leaps in the movie production arena. 

One such example was the Lord of the Rings novel by J.R.R. Tolkien; before Peter Jackson's brilliant trilogy was brought to our big screens in all its glory there was a film released in the 1980s which had even run out of money and the part-cartoon, part real movie was a proper damp-squib to say the least. There is course is no suggestion that John Ritter and Annette O'Toole's efforts in the 1990 screening was bad but the new remake will make full use of all the latest technologies that Warner Brothers can finance and director Fukunaga can summon up. It is also worth remembering that the original 1990 screenplay was indeed fearful and scary but had a television style screenplay about it. The new remake is likely to more cinematic and therefore perhaps even scarier.

In the remake there is a promise that the care and attention to detail that Stephen King penned in the book, will be kept as true to form as possible. There is a promise from Warner Brothers and the production team that the book itself will be very much respected and any deviance from it will not be tolerated. Stephen King's It remake promises to have all the horror and fear of the book with a new cinema edge to it.


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