by Dr Kain » Tue Dec 17, 2019 10:13 pm
Well, it took me 3 months, but I finally finished IT. There was a lot of good, there was quite a bit bad, but overall, it was enjoyable. I did like that more was shown/talked about with the Deadlights, especially revealing that it was a female. That was weird. On the other hand, after all of this talk about the turtle god, I expected it to have some major role in the book as opposed to the like page it got. Wow, so the only thing it did was tell Bill his brother's death was part of the will of the Macroverse and then gives him a sentence to help cure him of his stutter. Talk about being anti-climatic. Beverly's childhood "OH GODZILLA! WHAT TERRIBLE LANGUAGE!" scene got like 10 pages. WTF?! I also did not need to know about Henry's penis hardening when Patrick touched it while they were setting farts on fire. Also, jeez, Stan had even less development in the book than he had in the movie. I was hoping the book would get me to like this character, but nope, he's even worse.
Anyway, I'm really surprised that the movie did not feature the Michael Bay orgasm scene, I mean Derry being destroyed by an immense flood. That seems like that would be something a movie studio would have loved to have incorporated.
I do love all of the movie references throughout the book, especially with them being used to scare the kids. The Crawling Eye would have been really cool to have seen in the movie as opposed to just Pennywise getting his (or should it be "her?") ass beat by a punch of kids with a pipe at the end of the first part.
In the long run, if someone were to ask me which version of the story is my favorite, the book, the Curry movie, or the recent movie duology, it would still be the new movies. There's just a few things it does better in my viewpoint, and it also gets rid of some of the pointless fluff, especially the horrid Beverly sex scene, but there are some other aspects I do wish it featured that were from the book, especially when it came to Henry and his goons. Nevertheless, I'm glad to have gone on this adventure of diving into all three variations of the tale in a short timespan.
