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Small Details In It That Only True Fans Noticed


                     Small Details In It That Only True Fans Noticed

The newest adaptation of Stephen King's It contains a lot of Easter eggs — some of which are more obvious than others.In addition to the ones we've talked about before, like those t-shirt logos, here's a look at some of the other small details in It that only true fans noticed.

The absentee parents As we see in the beginning of the movie, Derry has instituted a town curfew in reaction to the disappearances of Georgie Denbrough, Betty Ripsom, and others.Kids are expected to be home by seven sharp.But that appears to be the full extent of the adults'; concern or responsive action regarding their own children's well-being.This is definitely a conscious nod to the parents depicted in the book, who prefer to forget about the town's dark history, even ignoring violence as it happens.

Most of the parental figures in the film are ones that have created additional problems for their children.Robert Dohay's head​During the movie's visual history of the Easter parade explosion that claimed the lives of so many kids, there's one particularly gruesome image that the camera seems to linger on a boy's head up in a tree."What's that?!"That's a nod to Robert Dohay, a nine-year-old character from the book whose remains popped up days after the rest of the victims in a neighbor's apple tree… and it was just his head. Considering all the creepy book deaths that didn't make the leap from the page to the big screen, that's an unsettling one to keep for sure.The stutter chant Another thing book readers and fans of the mini-series will recognize is the phrase Bill uses to overcome his stutter.In the book, it's "he thrusts his fists against the posts and still insists he sees the ghosts."In the movie, only a fraction of that is uttered by Bill, perhaps because he's still struggling to finish it.

Without the second clause, it's a little less creepy, but the line is still seen as a major metaphor for the story as a whole.And he uses it to regain his self-confidence and strength in times of trial in the book and movie alike, so it's still effective.I heart DerryPatrick Huckster's death in the movie is nothing like it was in the book.But there is still something familiar about his fate.In the movie, he comes upon a balloon that turns around to read "I Heart Derry" on it before It gets him.It's ominous enough standing alone, but when you remember the book's story about Adrian Mellon, it's even worse.In the book, Adrian was a gay man who was beaten up and flung beneath a bridge by some homophobic bullies.While trying to rescue him, his partner saw the clown and that the overpass was filled with balloons that had the same phrasing on it.And it was a hat with the "I Heart Derry" logo that started the attack sequence in the first place.Perhaps the reason the balloon came into play for Patrick here is that in the books, he too exhibited a preference for a same-sex partner, even though that didn't make it to screen.The corner Another wink to the source material is contained in the location of Georgie's travels while chasing his paper boat down the street.

The camera pans to the street signs, which reveal he's at the intersection of Jack son and Witch am, just like in the book.And the fact that he runs right into one of the sawhorses that littered the flooded street,well, that's quite literally a book reference that smacks us in the face.Paul Bunyan When the Losers gather to discuss the town's killer clown in the park, a statue of Paul Bunyan can be seen lingering behind Mike as he fills them in on what he knows.In the book, the statue is not only there, but it also comes to life to taunt Richieas his own personalized fear, instead of the clowns.Perhaps the reason the statue still made it into the movie, despite not being presentedas Richie's materialized fear factor, is that the statue really does exist in Stephen King's neck of the woods in Bangor, Maine.Not only that, but it's been creeping all the locals out​ since it was erected."I know the difference between a bad dream and real life, okay?"The forgetting After they manage to defeat It for the first time, the Losers assemble for what is, unbeknownst to them, the last time the seven will be together like this.

They listen to Beverly as she talks about what it was like to be under the dead lights of Penny wise, and she tells them that she's already forgetting pieces of what she experienced.That's a definite bit of foreshadowing for what's going to come when they grow up and purge It and Derry as a whole from their adult memories… until It returns, of course.Exit order Another subtle preview exists in the order in which the Losers take leave of each other,with Stan departing first and Eddie shortly behind him.As we know from the book's second half, that's also the order in which they'll depart in entirely different ways.Stan, as an adult, is so shaken by the return of It that he takes his own life in the bathtub.And Eddie makes it back to Derry to fight alongside his childhood comrades but is killed in the battle before It is ultimately defeated.Those might be stories for ​Chapter Two​, but ​It​ wasn't afraid to give fans alittle taste of what's to come here.Thanks for watching!Click the Loo per icon to subscribe to our YouTube channel.Plus check out all this cool stuff we know you'll love, too!



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