Though much is taken, much abides; and though
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are,
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
--Lord Alfred Tennyson--
I love this book. It's so damn out there. The climax of the book is actually the children's story since it goes back and forth. It would be very tough to make a true climax without the kids part I don't think since that stuff is so much better. One of the weakest elements of the 1990 movie.
I don't know Grace by name, but when I saw the word robotic I guessed who she was. After a quick google search I see it is in fact who I thought. Yeah, she is very robotic. She talks like she's explaining things to small children in her videos.
I'm pretty sure this whole video is making fun of her weird videos and delivery.
LOVED this movie. Girlfriend didn't like it as much, as she was expecting a standard horror-genre type of film, but I thought the movie was amazing. The Losers Club just kills it.
It's already doubled it's budget in a day and previews, so hopefully the studio is willing to sink some resources into it
Just saw it in IMAX great movie and with the sound system the first few scenes with Pennywise got so loud you feel the rumble was great experience. Kids were great and looks like it is going to do well enough both box office and critically that they can get some damn good actors for adults as they got big shoes to fill.
The kids were so good that I'm skeptical the second one can be as good as this one was.
The adult part can be done well if they are willing to really go where the book went and showcase how different this monster is when dealing with adults vs kids. It's actually one of those situations where the kids were a lot better off facing IT than they would be 27 years later as more cynical and jaded adults.
Exactly.
It's like she is someone that is not knowledgeable in movies and only learned about it at school and passed down what she learned without having her own critical independant thought. It reminds of the movie "Dead Poet Society" when their teacher gives the students a book of how to write poetry "correctly" with countless rules. When the new teacher arrives played by Robin Williams, he says to the students basically to destroy your books. This is not poetry, poetry comes from the heart, etc...
Also if an alien would come to Earth and would try to disguise itself as a movie critic, it would sound like Grace.
http://www.boxofficemojo.com/news/?id=4323&p=.htm
Would not be surprised if this film continues to destroy records, should have good dancing clown legs'It' Devours Competition with Record-Breaking $117 Million Opening
by Brad Brevet
September 10, 2017
With a monster, $117 million opening weekend Warner Bros. and New Line's It has delivered a record-breaking opening, breathing a little life back into the slumping domestic box office. The film has claimed the largest September opening, largest Fall opening, the largest opening for an R-rated horror film, not to mention the largest opening weekend for a horror film of any MPAA rating, and tops Open Road's new release Home Again in second place by nearly $110 million. Overall, the film accounted for more than 75% of the combined gross for the weekend's top twelve, and we've only just begun.
With an estimated $117 million, WB and New Line's It, an adaptation of the acclaimed Stephen King novel, claimed the weekend's #1 spot with ease, besting Open Road's new release of Home Again in second place by nearly $110 million, the fifth largest gap between first and second place all-time. The film also dusted the previous opening weekend record for an R-rated horror film, more than doubling Paranormal Activity 3's previous record of $52.5 million. In fact, It is already the fifth highest grossing R-rated horror film all-time after just three days in release.
The horror film's debut was the widest opening ever for an R-rated film and as such delivered the second largest opening for an R-rated movie behind Deadpool's $132.4 million opening last February. Additionally, the previous opening weekend record for September was held by Hotel Transylvania 2 with $48.5 million and the previous Fall opening weekend record was Gravity's $55.7 million, neither of which stood a chance against It and combined don't even come within $10 million.
It should be mentioned that rival estimates put It's opening over $120 million and some closer to $125 million. One obvious reason for the disparity has to do with Hurricane Irma hitting Florida this weekend where ~175 theaters are closed. The state typically represents 5.5-6.5% of the domestic gross each weekend.
It received a "B+" CinemaScore, which, for comparison, is below the "A-" the first two Conjuring films received and ahead of both Annabelle features. The audience was split nearly down the middle, playing 51% female vs. 49% male with 10% of the audience under the age of 18, of which scored the film an "A-". Overall 65% of the audience was over the age of 25.
Internationally, It brought in an estimated $62 million from 46 markets for a $179 million global debut. The overseas numbers include the largest opening weekend for a horror film in the U.K. ($12.3m), Russia ($6.7m), Australia ($5.9m), Brazil ($5.6m), Netherlands ($1.4m) and Poland ($1.15m). Upcoming releases include openings in The next key markets to open include Sweden and Mexico next week followed by France (Sep 20), Argentina (Sep 21), Germany (Sep 28) and Italy (Oct 19).
Interesting year for King movies we got a big old bomb and a smash hit. Hopefully this one will lead to some more rated R adaptions, over the years they have talked about doing Stand movie and this may be opening the door to that. To bad they killed the Dark Tower series potential with the mess of the movie.