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  1. There is no book accurate Pennywise. It in the book pulls images from your mind and mirrors them back at you, so the clown will look different depending on what your idea of a clown is. To Georgie, he has red hair and looks like Bozo. To Don, he has orange hair and doesn't look like Bozo at all.

  2. 7 de jun. de 2023 · Despite being known for its form as Pennywise the Dancing Clown, the creature from Stephen King’s IT has many forms. But which look is book-accurate?

    • Staff Writer
  3. 22 de sept. de 2017 · Pennywise's clown appearance would slightly change throughout the book whenever It appeared. For example, one part of the book will say It has red hair while another time says the hair is orange. And while the books says It wears an electric blue tie, later on the book says that Pennywise wore a yellow bowtie that matched the color ...

    • Pennywise The Dancing Clown
    • Georgie Denborough
    • Dorsey Corcoran
    • The Creature from The Black Lagoon
    • Betty Ripsom
    • Giant Bird
    • Werewolf
    • Leper
    • Mummy
    • The Crawling Eye

    Pennywise the Dancing Clown is of course IT's default form in the book, the miniseries, and the movies. In some ways the Tim Curryversion is closer to the book's depiction, but in other ways the Bill Skarsgard version is. Both are equally valid portrayals, but for most King fans, the original rendition will always top them both in terror.

    Just as IT does in both adaptations, the monster also assumes the form of Bill Denborough's little brother Georgie in the book, usually to taunt Bill. That's always made all the sicker by the fact that IT was Georgie's murderer, as gruesomely depicted onscreen in the 2017 ITmovie. There's a reason Georgie's death is always IT's signature scene.

    Dorsey Corcoran never made it into the ITadaptations, but the portion of the book putting the spotlight on him and his brother Eddie is absolutely harrowing, not even entirely due to IT. Dorsey was brutally beaten to death with a hammer by his abusive father. IT later targeted Eddie while appearing as the corpse of his little brother. Related: Why ...

    Since the childhood portions of the IT novel were set in the 1950s, the creature turned into several movie monsters of the time, including the titular Creature from the Black Lagoon. IT turns into the Gill-man before killing Eddie Corcoran, but after appearing as Dorsey Corcoran. Eddie's death chapter remains difficult to read.

    Betty Ripsom was a young teenage girl taken and killed by IT, with her father later hearing her voice coming from their sink drain. Betty made it into the 2017 movie, seen when the Losers go to the house on Niebolt Street for the first time. Her body has been ripped in half, making her name almost darkly humorous.

    In the book, kid Mike Hanlon first encounters IT in the form of a giant bird creature, which didn't make it into either of the adaptations. The bird is described as being a hybrid of a crow that attacked Mike as a baby and the 1950s movie monster Rodan. In fairness, that wouldn't have been easy to visualize onscreen.

    When Bill and Richie first visit the house on Niebolt Street in the book, they encounter the werewolf from the 1950s monster movie I Was a Teenage Werewolf, having recently seen the film. Richie encountered this werewolf in the basement of Derry's school in the miniseries, while looking for Beverly's father Alvin, the school custodian. Related: IT:...

    The disgusting leper form of IT that Eddie Kaspbrak encounters at the house on Niebolt Street in the book was left out of the miniseries, but memorably made it into the 2017 and 2019 movies, as played by Javier Botet. In the book, Bill and Richie actually correct Richie's belief that it was a leper, saying its condition more resembled syphilis.

    Continuing IT's pattern in the book of appearing as old-school movie monsters, it takes on the form of Boris Karloff's mummy from Universal's classic 1932 film when targeting Ben Hanscom. IT appears to Stan as a kind of mummy creature in the miniseries too, although it doesn't resemble Karloff's version, and still has some clown features.

    The Crawling Eye is the title monster from the 1958 movie of the same name. The Losers' Club encounters The Crawling Eyewhen they head into Derry's sewer system for a showdown with IT, after it having been mentioned by one of them earlier in the book. These kids watch too many monster movies, at least more than are safe in Derry.

  4. I drew a book accurate Pennywise [OC] Archived post. New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be cast. It’s terrifying! Well done!! 256K subscribers in the stephenking community. The largest Stephen King Fan Community on Reddit!

  5. 27 de sept. de 2019 · Here's every substantial reference to Pennywise in other Stephen King novels. Pennywise the Dancing Clown was the sadistic antagonist of King's 1986 horror novel, IT . The book spawned a miniseries in 1990 as well as the two-part movie adaptation, IT and IT Chapter Two , directed by Andy Muschietti.

  6. 8 de sept. de 2017 · In 1986, King published “ It ,” which introduced the world to seven scrappy kids nicknamed The Losers Club, who faced off against a child-killing, shape-shifting clown named Pennywise, an evil...