In IT Chapter 2,
As in the book, at the end of the film the seven children make a solemn vow and take a blood oath that if It ever resurfaces in Derry, they will all come back — no matter where they are or what they're doing — to fight the entity once again.
The Losers descended on the lair and encountered Pennywise fully realized as his true form - a giant spider. The group fought the spider and lost Eddie in the process. Beverly shot IT with the slingshot, just as she did as a kid, and they successfully defeat the ancient entity for good.
In the adaptation of It Chapter Two, Richie is portrayed as being secretly in love with Eddie Kaspbrak until the latter's death, and Eddie remained unaware of these feelings.
Despite kissing Bill and reliving her childhood, Bev ends the sequel fully realizing her feelings for Ben. They share a passionate underwater kiss in the Derry quarry, and a flash-forward reveals they leave the town as a couple — their last scene is them watching the sunset on a yacht, clearly very much in love.
It's revealed this is Pennywise himself, disguised as an old woman and, in the miniseries, Bev's father. Based on her fear of the blood, it makes sense that adult Bev would now be afraid of the decaying old woman. This is an extension of her fear of aging, evolved into a fear of becoming old and withered.
In the novel, It's origins are nebulous. 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.
We learn that Richie Tozier, the fast-talking, foul-mouthed teenager (played by Finn Wolfhard) who grew up to be a popular stand-up comedian (Bill Hader) is gay and has been secretly in love with his friend and fellow club member Eddie Kaspbrak (played as an adult by James Ransone).
There could even be a new novel set in the IT universe, although Stephen King has stated that he has no intentions of bringing Pennywise back.
Finally, Pennywise is beaten into submission. He scurries away, utters the word "fear," and partially disintegrates before falling into the void. It's a powerful defeat of a powerful monster, and it's satisfaction enough were IT to remain a single film.
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.
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.
Although the Losers do manage to defeat It at the end of the movie, even they know the fight isn't over, which is why they make a blood oath to get the band back together if more Derry disappearances star happening in the future.
The spider-clown shrinks as the Losers hurl taunts at It, until it's tiny and weak enough that they pluck out its heart and squash it into nothingness. In the end, they defeat Pennywise by, uh, making him feel really bad about himself. It author Stephen King.
"Richie"he whispered. "What" Richie was on his hands and knees staring at him desperately. "Don't call me Ed's" he said and smiled.
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.
Myra Kasprak is a minor character in Stephen King's IT and its film adaptation sequel. She is Eddie Kaspbrak's wife. They have been married for five years and have no children.
In the 1986 book, Beverly is just 14 but has sex with all the other, even younger, members of the Losers Club. The scene was cut from the new movie but Stephen King has spoken out to defend and explain the controversial moment.
We meet her being bullied in the school bathroom. Her father assaults her in the bathroom at her house, and it's there that she cuts her hair to try to ward off his sexual attentions.
This would lead to one of the biggest Stephen King book controversies: after the Losers become lost in the sewers trying to make their way back to the surface, in IT Beverly decided to have sexual intercourse with all the boys from the Losers Club. This allowed them to remember the way back so they could make it home.
Stephen King's 'IT' introduced readers to a one-of-a-kind creature that can take any form, the most common one being Pennywise the Dancing Clown, and as menacing as it is, this creature has one big enemy it's truly scared of: Maturin, the turtle.
“It” is an evil entity that usually takes the form of a clown named Pennywise (played by Bill Skarsgård) and returns to Derry, Maine every 27 years to terrorize the town. The red balloon is a harbinger that It is watching you.
The Losers moulded it into the form of a spider because that was all their puny human minds could perceive it as, but it wasn't really the spider. In the same way that a spider cannot truly understand what a human being is.
Beverly "Bev" Marsh is a fictional character created by Stephen King and one of the main characters of his 1986 horror novel It.