All of them return to Derry, except for Stanley, who kills himself out of fear of the creature. At a Chinese restaurant, Mike refreshes the Losers' memories before Pennywise itself reveals the news of Stanley's suicide to them.
Movie info
He is the oldest of the seven members of The Losers' Club, and the only member Pennywise is afraid of. With the others, he fights Pennywise the Dancing Clown, both in 1958, 1985, 1989, and 2016 He, however, gets killed by Pennywise in the final fight (IT (book), (IT: Chapter Two.)
In a twist shocking to viewers who haven't read Stephen King's novel, Stanley Uris never makes the journey back to Derry; instead, he dies by suicide shortly after learning that Pennywise the Dancing Clown has resurfaced.
That's because Stanley opts to kill himself rather than confront the horrors all over again. He gets the phone call, he immediately goes upstairs, he draws himself a bath, and he ends his own life. It's a horrifying tragedy, and it also serves a dramatic function.
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.
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.
Eddie Kaspbrak
Image via New Line, Warner Bros. The biggest gut-punch in the whole movie, Eddie Kaspbrak, aka Eds, aka Eddie Spaghetti, dies after Pennywise stabs him in the chest with one of his giant spider-claws.
Throughout the novel and theatrical film series, Pennywise uses the "ghost of Georgie" to play on Bill's survivor's guilt. This is further explored in It Chapter Two (where Bill blames himself for Georgie's death), exemplified in a scene in which the adult Bill returns to the storm drain where Georgie was murdered.
Now, when the Losers crushed IT's heart while in its spider form, they killed IT's physical form and severed its connection to Derry, thus why the town was destroyed, but the true entity still lives in another plane of existence.
They ask Bev how she knew how Stanley died, and she says she has seen how they all die, as she was the only one who saw the Deadlights when Pennywise captured her.
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.
Fears: Like most of the Losers, Stan fears the adults around him, who have either ignored him, overlooked him, or misunderstood him to such an extent that he only finds comfort in the presence of the other Losers. But Stan's inherent skepticism often prevents him from fully committing to the battle against IT...
Image via Warner Bros. 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.
Molly Atkinson reprises her role as Sonia, Eddie's Munchausen syndrome by proxy-stricken mother, and also plays Eddie's wife Myra, who is very similar to Sonia.
Movie info
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.
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.
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.
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.
Dean is confirmed to be 12 years of age. This makes Dean the 2nd oldest child to be killed by Pennywise on-screen.
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.
So, who dies in It: Chapter 2 then? Unfortunately Stanley Urbis and Eddie Kaspbrak perish, but by doing so they actually help their friends in their quest to kill Pennywise.
And if his victim believes him to be powerless, he will become powerless. And so the group figures out that their best bet is, essentially, to bully the bully: They mock Pennywise, telling him he isn't scary. Humiliated, Pennywise begins to shrink, transforming into an almost Benjamin Button–like, melted clown-baby.
Film: At the house on Neibolt Street, the kids basically do a bunch of damage by impaling It with rods. It looks like they get these weapons from the rusty wrought-iron fence of the house itself. Down in the sewers, during their final encounter, it's much of the same.
Twenty-seven years after their first showdown with the murderous clown, the now-grown members of the Losers' Club converged on Derry to defeat Pennywise forever. In their final battle, the Losers' Club was able to kill Pennywise by reducing him to a child-like form as they overcame their fears.