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    Movie Review

    IT: Chapter Two scares off viewers with extended running time

    Alex Bentley
    Sep 5, 2019 | 4:47 pm
    IT: Chapter Two scares off viewers with extended running time
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    Stephen King has been the go-to person for horror both on the page and on screen for well over 40 years. Just when you think his influence is going to wane, along comes a movie like 2017’s IT that reminds people how effective his work can be when adapted by the right filmmakers.

    The book IT was split almost evenly between the younger and adult versions of the gang known as The Losers, so it was inevitable that IT: Chapter Two would come along, given the success of the first film. Taking place 27 years later, the film follows the grown-up Losers — Beverly (Jessica Chastain), Bill (James McAvoy), Richie (Bill Hader), Ben (Jay Ryan), Eddie (James Ransone), and Stanley (Andy Bean) — when they are called back to Derry, Maine, by Mike (Isaiah Mustafa) after Pennywise (Bill Skarsgård) re-emerges from the sewers.

    Mike has spent his adulthood obsessively trying to figure out how to get rid of Pennywise once and for all, while the rest of the group has managed to somewhat put their childhood trauma behind them. All of it comes rushing back upon their return, and Mike challenges each of them to do their part to end the scourge of the scary clown.

    The first film had one big thing working for it that is limited in the sequel. The ‘80s nostalgia and group of kids banding together to fight a supernatural being played much the same card as the Netflix show Stranger Things, especially given the presence of actor Finn Wolfhard in both. The perceived innocence and precociousness of the kids lent that film a feeling that Chapter Two can’t replicate, even though it relies somewhat heavily on flashbacks to the kids.

    Another unintended consequence of the transition from childhood to adulthood is that Pennywise doesn’t come across as scary anymore. He and the weird waking nightmares he creates are creepy, to be sure, but everything about him is too strange to be frightening. As the film reaches its third hour — more on that in a second — the only natural reaction to the craziness and mayhem on screen is laughter, even when it’s not intended.

    Director Andy Muschietti and writer Gary Dauberman were apparently given carte blanche after the first film made more than $700 million worldwide, and to say they take advantage is an understatement. They spend significant time alone with each major character, an idea that may have seemed good in theory but is deadly in practice. Clocking in at 2 hours and 49 minutes, the film is much too long to be effective. A movie like this needs to build up tension, and by letting the plot breathe so much, the filmmakers let all the air out of Pennywise’s menacing balloons.

    The cast winds up being much better than the material as a whole. Much like Sophia Lillis was as Beverly in the first film, Chastain is the best thing about the sequel. McAvoy gets to try on yet another accent – with a stutter, to boot — and is hit-and-miss at it. Hader and Ransone are great as comic relief, while Mustafa — aka the Old Spice guy — is given a one-note role that doesn’t do him any favors.

    If they were going to tell the story in full, there was no getting around focusing on adult characters in IT: Chapter Two. But the filmmakers made the change in the story worse by indulging in every storytelling whim they wanted, whether it was warranted or not.

    James McAvoy in IT: Chapter Two.

    James McAvoy in IT: Chapter Two
    Photo by Brooke Palmer
    James McAvoy in IT: Chapter Two.
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    This week's hot headlines

    Colorful Mexican chain bringing tacos to McKinney leads week's top stories

    Stephanie Allmon Merry
    Nov 29, 2025 | 10:00 am
    Barrio Tacos
    Barrio
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    Editor's note: Sit back and relax on this long Thanksgiving weekend, and get caught up on the week's headlines. Our most-read stories in recent days include news of a new taco shop coming to McKinney, roundups of holiday pop-up bars and holiday ice rinks, a new Uptown steakhouse, and a new wholesale club. Need plans this weekend? Check out our Weekend Event Planner. Want to see the best local Christmas lights? Here's the ultimate guide.

    1. Colorful Mexican chain Barrio will bring tacos and tequila to McKinney. There's a new taco coming to Texas: Called Barrio, it's a chain that was founded in Ohio, of all places, and it's opening its first Texas location in McKinney, at 9401 W. University Dr. #150. According to franchisee Wissam Saliba, the restaurant will open in February 2026.

    2. All the holiday pop-up bars keeping Dallas' spirits bright in 2025. The holiday pop-up season has arrived, and Dallas-Fort Worth is absolutely frosted in festive takeovers. Whether you love your holidays kitschy, classy, tropical, or with a Texas twist, this list has your perfect jolly pop-up.

    Leela's Wine Bar holiday Leela's Holiday House is really three different festive destinations. Leela's/Facebook

    3. New Andreas steakhouse lands in former Morton's space in Uptown Dallas. A new steakhouse has opened at an Uptown Dallas address that has a steakhouse past: Andreas Prime Steaks & Seafood, a concept from chef Andreas Kotsifos, has opened at 2222 McKinney Ave., in the former Morton's The Steakhouse space, with steaks and European-influenced cuisine.

    4. 9 Dallas-area ice rinks to spin & glide through the 2025 holiday season. Forget Milan-Cortina. The real winter figure skating action is taking place across Dallas-Fort Worth this holiday season. Here are nine cool DFW ice rinks to jump into family fun for the 2025 holidays.

    5. Northeast discount chain BJ's Wholesale Club to open store in Mesquite. A new destination for discount shoppers has debuted in Mesquite: BJ’s Wholesale Club, a membership-based warehouse club making its way into Texas, will open a location in Mesquite at 4355 Childress Dr., on the southeast corner of US-30 and 635, in a 104,763-square-foot space that was previously a rolling green field.

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