11/15/2023 0 Comments Andy muschietti artQuint: I don't know if you remember but I visited you guys on the set. Seeing the movie 300 times you get used to everything, but that end still gets me every time. Everybody's loving your movie! I saw it with a crowd that went absolutely bananas when “Chapter One” popped up at the end.Īndy Muschietti: Yeah, it's one of those moments that still gets me. Hope you enjoy!īarbara Muschietti: Hi, Eric. In our all-too-brief chat below you'll find us covering as much ground as I could about getting the right kids for the movie, the reason for not going as reference-heavy as the source material and the subtext of It's influence on this small Maine town and why that was important to this picture (and, most likely, crucial to the pending sequel). They seemed to strike that perfect balance of respecting the material without being married to it. I got the chance to talk with Andy and Barbara about the amount of detail that went into this adaptation and it's clear that they know their shit, but also know what will translate into a modern day adaptation of this material. The town of Derry feels real because every corner has history, every storefront has a story and every character within feels heightened. One of the main reasons people are taking so strongly to this Stephen King adaptation is the level of detail that director Andy Muschietti and the creative team behind the movie, including his sister and producer Barbara Muschietti, have jammed into the picture. IT had a massive weekend and has become a real deal phenomenon. Meanwhile IT: Chapter 2 hits theaters September 6, 2019.Ahoy, squirts! Quint here. IT releases on home video on Januwith digital video platforms releasing the film a month earlier on December 19 of this year. They square off against an evil clown named Pennywise, whose history of murder and violence dates back for centuries. In the film, a group of young kids face their biggest fears when they seek answers to the disappearance of children in their hometown of Derry, Maine. The idea is the ‘It’ entity was dormant for thousands and thousands of years. That might be something worth exploring in the second one. It’s very disturbing, and sort of a backstory for what It is, or where Pennywise came from. The scene turned out really, really disturbing. “There was a scene we shot that was a flashback from the 1600s, before Pennywise. Skarsgård himself commented on its disturbing quality: Personally, however, I’m more interested in the deleted baby-eating scene. And that’s what prompts Bill, that’s basically Bill’s motivation in the story, is finding Georgie alive.” He’s attacked by Pennywise, and he’s missing an arm, and he tries to get away from the sewer, like he’s dragged into it again, leaving a trail of blood, but his body is never found. ![]() “…you have to know something, which is, maybe that you shouldn’t publish it, but in this story, there is no confirmation that Georgie is dead. Muschetti himself described the scene as “brutal”: It really makes you wonder just how far the actual opening could’ve went. It’s pretty interesting getting to see such an iconic scene drawn out and specified with eerie details like Pennywise smelling Georgie. #ITMovie #killmouthĪ post shared by Andy Muschietti on at 12:45pm PST And here a little sketch i drew for pennywise’s “killmouth”, one of the comedic highlights of the film // acá un dibujito que hice para el momento mas humorístico de la peli.
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