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The film broke the record for the highest Monday that the month of September has ever seen with $8.8 million (besting The Sixth Sense ' s (1999) $6.37 million), [375] the biggest Monday ever for an R-rated horror and/or scary movie, [376] while breaking the record for the highest Tuesday that the month of September has ever seen with $11.4 ...
It, a 1990 television miniseries film based on Stephen King's novel; It (Phish video), a 2004 DVD set about the Phish festival; Incredible Tales, simply known as I.T., a 2004 Singaporean horror anthology TV series; I.T., a 2016 film starring Pierce Brosnan; It, a film adaptation of Stephen King's novel
The film also had the fifth-highest opening weekend for an R-rated film, behind its predecessor It, The Matrix Reloaded, Deadpool and Deadpool 2. [53] It made $39.6 million in its second weekend, retaining the top spot, before making $17.0 million in its third weekend and being dethroned by newcomer Downton Abbey .
I.T. is a 2016 thriller film directed by John Moore and written by Dan Kay and William Wisher.It stars Pierce Brosnan, James Frecheville, Anna Friel, Stefanie Scott, and Michael Nyqvist and was produced by David T. Friendly and Beau St. Clair, who was Brosnan's producing partner at the production company Irish DreamTime before her death.
The first release of the score was in February 1996, but only as a 16-minute suite on the album Richard Bellis: Film Music Volume 1. [74] Then, a 2-CD release of the TV movie's complete score by Richard Bellis was released on November 15, 2011, by Intrada Records, [72] and is volume 184 of the label's special collection. [71]
It has been adapted into a 1990 two-part miniseries directed by Tommy Lee Wallace, a Hindi 1998 television series directed by Glen Baretto & Ankush Mohla, and a film duology directed by Andy Muschietti. Muschietti's It was released in September 2017 and It Chapter Two was released in September 2019.
Author and film critic Leonard Maltin gave the film two out of four stars. [8] David Camak Pratt from PopMatters, reviewing the double feature DVD release, awarded it three out of 10 stars. In his review, Pratt called the film "uneven" and "ridiculous", criticizing the film's Psycho-like plot points as being both obvious and pointless. [9]
It, also known as Pennywise, Robert 'Bob' Gray, and Pennywise the Dancing Clown, is the titular antagonist in Stephen King's 1986 horror novel It.The character is an ancient, trans-dimensional malevolent entity who preys upon the children (and sometimes adults) of Derry, Maine, roughly every 27 years, using a variety of powers that include the ability of shapeshifting and manipulation of reality.