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Real-life horrors in ‘It: Welcome to Derry’

Los Angeles Times

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October 31, 2025

“Ya Got Trouble” via the classic musical “The Music Man” is an ominous introduction to the subsequent terrors.

Real-life horrors in ‘It: Welcome to Derry’

CHILDREN face an evil presence in their small town in “It: Welcome to Derry.”

(Brooke Palmer HBO)

Gruesome sequences revolving around birth in the first two episodes will likely make several viewers cover their eyes. (The second episode drops Friday on HBO Max in time for Halloween, and it will air in its usual 9 p.m. Sunday slot on HBO.)

A prequel to 2017's “It” and 2019’s “It: Chapter Two” — both directed by Andy Muschietti— the new drama is set in 1962 in the fictional small town of Derry, Maine. Bill Skarsgård, who played Pennywise in the films, will reprise his role during the season.

The large ensemble of child actors and adults features several Black characters, including Air Force Maj. Leroy Hanlon (Jovan Adepo); his wife, Charlotte (Taylour Paige), a civil rights activist in a Jackie Kennedy pillbox hat; and son Will (Blake Cameron James). Also featured is Hank Grogan (Stephen Rider), the town’s theater projectionist, and his teen daughter Ronnie (Amanda Christine).

Developed by Muschietti, his sister Barbara Muschietti and Jason Fuchs, the creators have prioritized increasing the intensity of the films. But the Muschietti siblings add that they are also incorporating certain messages into the mayhem. Many of the Black characters face bigotry and resistance in the predominantly white town that echo challenges that people of color currently face.

“Stephen is a master of weaving these issues into his stories, and it’s impossible to think of doing one of his stories without having that texture front and center,” Barbara Muschietti said.

The Muschiettis, in a video call, discussed diving deeper into the story of Pennywise, getting their young cast to act like kids from the 1960s, and what gives them nightmares. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

How soon after the two “It” movies did the idea of a deeper dive into the world of Pennywise come about?

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