2017 and 2019 films. Bill was portrayed again by Jaeden Martell as a child and James McAvoy as an adult in the 2017 adaptation and its 2019 sequel. In this interpretation, the sequel reveals that he pretended to be sick the day Georgie was killed, resulting in his guilt over his brother's death.
While he comes close to presenting as the real Georgie, it was his fatal mistake of calling the boat “it” instead of “she” that caused Bill to acknowledge that it was Pennywise in disguise. Bill shoots the look-a-like, and the Losers have an all out brawl that defeats the creature for the time being.
He is the son of Zack and Sharon Denbrough and the older brother of George Denbrough. At the age of three, he is hit by a car and knocked into the side of a building, an accident that left him unconscious for seven hours and that becomes his mother's explanation for his persistent stutter.
It shows up as an animated version of George because that is what Bill fears the most at that very moment. He wants his brother back, of course, but he's also racked with misplaced guilt over his brother's death and is scared that his brother, if he were to come back, would blame him for his untimely death.
In the full version of the "you lied and I died" scene, Georgie (or at least the appearance of him) blames Bill for his death, arguing that Bill was only pretending to be sick on the day Georgie died, and in fact just didn't want to go out and play with him.
In this interpretation, the sequel reveals that he pretended to be sick the day Georgie was killed, resulting in his guilt over his brother's death.
According to It, when humans got scared, "all the chemicals of fear flooded the body and salted the meat". This is why he prefers to feast on children -- their fears are simple, pure, and powerful compared to the complex, pathological fears of adults. Basically, children are delicious.
Stan is one of the two members (alongside Eddie Kaspbrak) of the Losers Club to die, although Stan committed suicide due to his fear of Pennywise, while Eddie is killed by Pennywise.
Decades later, Bill is still convinced that he is to blame for Georgie's death and doesn't recognize that what his parents did to him was wrong and abusive. This doesn't change until IT forces him to confront his greatest fear by turning into Georgie and accusing him of being the reason Georgie died.
The full phrase is, "He thrusts his fists against the post, and still insists he sees the ghost." It's supposed to rid Bill of his stutter.
Mike- At The End Of Chapter Two Mike Tells Bill That He Loved Him. He Didn't Say "I Love You" To Any Other Person BUT Bill! And He Was Nervous And Hesitant When He Said It.
When she makes it to Derry, IT uses Tom Rogan to capture her and uses her as bait to lure Bill Denbrough. The Losers defeat IT once and for all, and rescue Audra from IT's lair. She survives (she is the only person to survive the death defying limbo), but is left in a catatonic state.
While playing Pennywise in IT and IT Chapter Two, Bill Skarsgard wears a set of prosthetic teeth, for times when the dancing clown really needs to show off his razor-sharp chompers. The problem is, these teeth caused Skarsgard to drool, and not just a little. The teeth caused full-on torrents of slobber from the actor.
Pictures] In King's book, Georgie Denbrough apparently dies from complications due to having his arm ripped off by a reptile-toothed clown.
As well as having his right arm bitten off, Georgie is trying to crawl away but he was dragged into the sewers and devoured by Pennywise, with an unnamed older woman and her cat being the sole witnesses of the horrific scene, including before Georgie lost his arm.
He took the form of a clown most frequently, Mr. Bob Gray or Pennywise, but his true form is an ancient eldritch entity from another universe who landed in the town that would become Derry by way of an asteroid and first awoke in 1715.
there is no confirmation that Georgie is dead. He's attacked by Pennywise, and he's missing an arm, and he tries to get away from the sewer, like he's dragged into it again, leaving a trail of blood, but his body is never found.
Pennywise offers Georgie his boat back, but when Georgie attempts to reach out to it, Pennywise grabs Georgie's arm and bites it off, leaving Georgie to bleed to death in the rain.
It's just a symbol, kind of like a visual catch-phrase that stems from Pennywise telling Georgie that the balloons in the sewer circus float, and “you'll float too!” Balloons also match with his primary from, a clown.
And Eddie wants to say something, and he dies in the middle of his sentence. He says, "Richie, I..." And then goes. It was two different ways of solving the scene. I felt it was a little bit bit overkill, to find, after all that time, to come back and Eddie was still alive.
Stanley Uris is one of the protagonists of Stephen King's novel IT. He was a member of The Losers' Club. He assists the other Losers in fighting It in 1958, but does not return to Derry in 1985 to help them a second time when he committed suicide. As a kid in the 1990 miniseries, Stan is portrayed by Ben Heller.
“Beep beep, Richie,” Stan hissed, elbowing his friend sharply in the ribs and hoping none of the other losers had heard his comment. Richie had caught Stan eyeing Bill a few times now and, while Stan had still refused to admit it out loud, incessantly teased him about his crush.
Since It is hungry, it goes for the first thing that it can eat, such as Bill's brother or the man at the beginning of the book. In the books it describes that It prefers feasting on children because they have more vivid imaginations and are much easier to scare. Adults are described as “complicated”.
The simplest and most obvious interpretation is that all the talk of floating is a reference to the fact that Pennywise (aka the titular "It") murders his victims and drags them down to the town's sewer system where he dwells, which is full of water. And what do dead bodies do in water? That's right — they float.
Muschietti appears to be implying Pennywise was a human familiar who It corrupted and then enjoyed so much It incorporated his shape into its file cabinet of monsters.