It
Chapter 2 (2019)
Dir. Andy Muschietti
Written
by Gary Dauberman,
from half the novel It by Stephen King
Starring Jessica Chastain, James McAvoy, Bill
Hader, Isaiah Mustafa, Jay Ryan, James Ransone, Bill Skarsgård
For some
reason I really doubled down on the Stephen King for the start of this
Chainsawnukah. I don’t know why, exactly; I mean, you’re not going to be able
to watch 50+ horror movies in a single month without getting some
Stephen King adaptations in there by sheer random chance, but I wasn’t really
seeking them out, necessarily. And I wasn’t seeking IT CHAPTER 2 out, in
particular; I’ve never read the book, was lukewarm at best about its
predecessor, 2017’s IT CHAPTER 1,
and was absolutely mystified by its titanic financial and popular success (it
remains, by a substantial margin, the highest-grossing horror movie of all
time). Its GOONIES-style “Losers Club” of spunky, potty-mouthed outcast kids
endeared it to me somewhat (the youthful cast instill their characters with a
lot of personality, even if they tend towards one-dimensional types) but
ultimately I felt like the horror leaned too hard on flashy CG and ended up
looking --and feeling—more like a busy, insubstantial comic book movie than a
horror movie. Not really what I’m looking for this time of year. That, and, uh,
pretty much everyone I talked to seems to be uniformly of the opinion that the
“good part” of the novel was exclusively confined to the material with kids,
and the associated material with the adults, 27 years later, was hot garbage.
So I cannot say I had high hopes for CHAPTER 2.
Even going
in with such low expectations, though, I emerged aghast at what a spectacularly
empty 169 minutes this turns out to be. Every problem CHAPTER 1 had is
amplified exponentially here, and virtually every bit of its charm is
diminished. The movie is absolutely chock-a-block with self-defeating
decisions, and nearly every one of which can be laid squarely at the feet of
director Andy Muschietti (MAMA, CHAPTER 1) and screenwriter Gary Dauberman
(ANNABELLE, working on his own this time, after previously adapting a script by Chase
Palmer and Cary Fukunaga, who had been developing the film before Muschietti
came on board). I mean, I suppose you could also easily blame King himself,
from whose novel much of this dreck arises, but King at least didn’t bifurcate
the story this way. As I understand it (and, having never read the novel, there
remains a possibility that I actually don’t understand it) King
essentially uses the “adult” material (set in 1985 in the book, and 2016 here)
as a mystery framing device: we meet the adults at the outset of the novel, upon
their return to Derry, Maine, 27 years after a summer that they mysteriously
cannot remember, and the story of their childhood encounter with “It” in 1958
(1989 in the movie) unfolds gradually as they explore the town and recover
their missing memory.
You can
argue that some of the individual plot beats within this quest to recover their
lost memory are pretty lousy (a sequence in which a giant statue of Paul Bunyan
attacks Ritchie is a face-palming low point for the movie, and comes, of
course, directly from King’s pen). But you cannot take issue with the novel’s
nimble, parallel-timelines structure, a rather clever and narratively
economical way of getting at King’s obvious goal in telling a story that
straddles two decades: exploring the ways in which the past informs the
present, how the people we were become the people we are. By
sending his adult characters on a journey to re-discover their unhappy
childhoods, he forces them to directly confront the unformed roots of the
people they would become.
Alas, then,
that separating the two parallel timelines into stubborn chronological order,
as the filmmakers have done, makes absolutely dire wreckage out of King’s
intent, and robs the entire plot of CHAPTER 2 of its basic reason for
existence. Since the “adult” story was, in the book, basically a framing
narrative --existing as a parallel echo of the “kids” story-- it naturally adopted
a nearly identical form: the Losers club comes together, breaks apart, and
finally reunites to confront the supernatural menace of “It” in its underground
lair. When telling the two stories simultaneously, their similar structure is a
logistical necessity. When telling them separately, however, it turns
the whole second movie into a helpless retread of the first, made impossibly
labored by the fact that we’re now an entire movie ahead of the characters.
Dauberman, you see, has suicidally decided to retain the basic structure of a
framing narrative, except that now it’s just framing a movie we’ve already seen
and are now watching the sequel for. Rather than serving as a mysterious
springboard for the tale, we now suffer through the now-adult characters
agonizingly re-learning everything we saw them learn last time around.
If it wasn’t
immediately obvious, we know from painful experience that turning framing stories into full movies is a bad idea. And this one is
fucking 169 minutes! It’s like if they spent three hours and eighty million
dollars making the famously flashback-padded SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT 2.
Except here’s the thing: nobody is going to tolerate an eighty million dollar
film that’s fully 1/3 recycled footage, and yet the adult story manifestly
exists only to facilitate flashbacks. So Muschietti and Dauberman’s solution is
to have the adults flash back to new footage from the previous film’s
time period. Which means in practice that, apparently, each child experienced
exactly one additional haunting incident that wasn’t important enough to be
included in its natural place somewhere in the middle of CHAPTER 1, and the
adults must now flash back to that one specific and relatively minor incident
to re-remember the events of the previous movie. Consequently CHAPTER 2 boasts
a screaming psychotic structure which basically revolves entirely around a
collection of out-takes from the first film, stapled to a bigger,
louder, longer retread of CHAPTER 1’s already enervating lightshow finale. And
did I mention it’s 169 fucking minutes?
Given all that,
the film was probably doomed to failure no matter what, and yet, even so, it
still manages to disappoint in other ways, though most remain tied to its
fantastically counterproductive structure in one way or another. Chief among the
remaining sins is its flagrant wasting of an excellent cast: if the movie has
nothing else at all going for it (and it basically doesn’t), credit must be
given for the spot-on casting of Jessica Chastain, James McAvoy, Jay Ryan, Bill
Hader, Isaiah Mustafa, James Ransone and Andy Bean, each a pitch-perfect mirror
for the specific idiosyncrasies projected by the younger originators of these
roles (all of whom also appear in flashbacks here). Honest to god, for the
first 40 minutes or so, the cast was so good that I almost thought there was
some hope here; despite the mess of the structure, the film’s opening does at
least an adequate enough job that, yoked to the fine performances of the
adults, something of King’s original interest in examining the links between
childhood and adulthood comes through. But those hopes are quickly dashed;
after a promising and genuinely charming reunion dinner, the “Loser’s Club”
gets split up again for separate time-wasting individual fetch quests, all of
which serve yet again to hammer home the single personality trait each one was
given in the previous film and let the corresponding adult vamp on that single
personality trait* until it reaches the point of parody, at which point it is
immediately forgotten and they each promptly lapse into interchangeable CG dolls
to get tossed around by a giant poorly-designed computerized monster. Indeed,
considering that the chief pleasure of CHAPTER 1 was almost entirely in its
earnest depiction of these characters and their relationship, CHAPTER 2’s
fanatical insistence on keeping them apart, and limiting their few interactions
to businesslike exposition, seems downright sadistic, especially in light of
the movie’s mammoth runtime.
You’ll
notice, by the way, that so far I’ve been entirely silent on the subject of any
actual genre content, which one might understandably expect would be the point,
or at least a point, in a movie which is ostensibly about an evil clown
(occasionally still Bill Skarsgård, though just as often a bunch of
bland-looking ones and zero’s). One might understandably expect that, but not
if one were Muschietti or Dauberman, who somehow manage to almost completely
excise anything that could reasonably be called horror from the movie. Don’t
get me wrong, I didn’t think the horror elements in CHAPTER 1 worked,
but at least they were there, recognizable as attempts at scare scenes.
Here, aside from a brief return to Beverly’s childhood home and a little
vignette which finds Pennywise luring a victim under some bleachers, there’s
almost nothing whatsoever which seems even intended to creep you out. In
fact, Pennywise rarely even appears, an unforgivable waste of the tremendously
effective work Skarsgård put into the character the first time around. There
are a few feints at some kind of weirdo, possibly EVIL-DEAD inspired gross-out
scenes (a dinner sequence where the food turns into grotesque insects, a
lengthy vomiting gag), and a good bit of frantic, expensive-looking CGI
slugfests (the Paul Bunyan sequence, the endless climax), but ultimately the
feel of the movie is much closer to some kind of quippy sci-fi adventure than
any kind of horror movie. The weightless, mood-killing CGI is a part of that
(see my review of CHAPTER 1 for a lengthy commentary on that subject) but a
bigger part is simply the tone and design of the movie. It feels
tongue-in-cheek and insubstantial in a way that CHAPTER 1, for all its faults,
did not, mechanically grinding through its plot without ever bothering to ask what
the point of any of this might be.**
In fact, the
movie that makes for the most fitting comparison isn’t even its predecessor, or
a horror film at all: it’s AVENGERS: ENDGAME. The parallels between the two are
genuinely striking: First, both were made under the weight of nearly unmatched
financial ambitions (following, as they do, the two previous highest-grossing
films in their respective genres) and have the bloated budgets and absurdly
distended runtimes to match those ambitions. But the similarities run deeper
than that: both movies also divide neatly into a rigid three act-structure,
with both movies employing a remarkably similar three acts: The first
needlessly splits our core group apart, entirely for the purpose of checking
back in on them as they deal with the consequences of a shared tragedy from
years ago, before laboriously re-assembling them. The second then takes our
laboriously re-assembled group and splits them up again, sending each on a
separate fetch-quest for a totemic object from their past, while at the same
time studiously avoiding materially interacting with that past in any meaningful
way. Finally, the third act brings everyone back together again for an endless,
monotonous slugfest against a giant, poorly-designed CGI enemy who must be
ironically defeated with a taste of his own medicine.*** Both movies feature
spectacularly overqualified casts stuffed into roles which are essentially
elaborate busywork given weight only by the affection for the characters we
bring with us from past adventures, and both somehow divide an epic length into
such easily digestible, bite-size pieces that the sum total barely feels like a
meal. More like distractedly binging on junk food for a few hours; you may
notice some slight discomfort by the end, but you’ll be hard-pressed to
specifically remember what might have caused it.
The result
is a movie which can’t exactly be called unendurably awful, not in the same
month where I’m likely to see Jess Franco movies and shit. The cast is
likeable, there are occasionally some weird monsters or something, and to its
credit, it moves along with a spritely energy that means you barely notice its
intimidating length (I’m told this is a characteristic it shares with the novel),
at least until the endless, shapeless final battle. But considering the
advantages it had at its disposal, in terms of budget, cast, and opportunity, I
can’t imagine a way to frame it that doesn’t feel like a gut-churning letdown,
even with expectations suitably lowered. I don’t know, it might have been a
hopeless cause from the get-go, but it could still damn well have added up to
more than this. This feels like a movie with no clear explanation for
its own existence, other than, you know, they titled the first one CHAPTER 1.
Fortunately, it seems like people actually caught on this time: it made just a
little over half of what its predecessor did in cinemas. I mean, it was still
wildly profitable, but maybe, just maybe, that’s enough of a drop to make
producers think it might be worthwhile to deliver a genuine horror movie next
time.
*With the exception of Mike, who is again treated as such an
afterthought that they don’t even bother giving him the one trait. Even calling
him “their black friend” feels like a more distinct characterization than he
gets here, despite Isaiah Mustafa’s (Old Spice Commercials, Shadowhunters)
game attempts to suggest his mental state is a bit shaky after all these years.
** In particular, the film’s decision to open with a brutal
hate crime which is then never addressed or remarked upon again strikes me as an
illustrative specimen of CHAPTER 2’s chronic lack of intent. I realize this
sequence comes from the book, but in 2019 it’s way too emotionally charged to
just toss off and forget about. Any sane person could see that if they just
stopped and thought about it for a second, but somehow the filmmakers just
marched on with it.
*** King himself appears in a cameo as a character who
complains about lousy endings to horror novels. I mean, ha ha, but instead of
just throwing up your hands and admitting your ending is terrible, why not think
of a better one? CHAPTER 2’s insecurity about its lame ending all but drips
from the screen –and I mean, deserved so, it sucks—but, like JURASSIC WORLD,
that just makes it even lamer. Look guys, you fucking shot it, you spent months
on the CGI and shit. At least have the conviction to stand behind what you
made.
CHAINSAWNUKAH
2019 CHECKLIST!
For Richer or Horror
TAGLINE
|
You’ll Float Too [two?].
Weird to remind us of
that, because actually no one floats here, they seem to have completely
abandoned that idea from CHAPTER 1.
|
TITLE ACCURACY
|
More like part
2, but I’ll allow it.
|
LITERARY ADAPTATION?
|
Yes, from the 1986
novel by Stephen King
|
SEQUEL?
|
Yep, right there in the
title.
|
REMAKE?
|
Arguably, since there
is a well-remembered 1990 mini-series adapting the same material.
|
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
|
USA
|
HORROR SUB-GENRE
|
Clownsploitation?
|
SLUMMING A-LISTER?
|
At least Chastain and
McAvoy. Oh, and Peter Bogdanovich has a cameo?
|
BELOVED HORROR ICON?
|
Stephen King
|
NUDITY?
|
None (sorry, fans of
the book’s original ending).
|
SEXUAL ASSAULT?
|
None
|
WHEN ANIMALS ATTACK!
|
Yes
|
GHOST/ ZOMBIE /
HAUNTED BUILDING?
|
One of Pennywise’s
forms is of a zombie-type thing.
|
POSSESSION?
|
No
|
CREEPY DOLLS?
|
None
|
EVIL CULT?
|
None
|
MADNESS?
|
None
|
TRANSMOGRIFICATION?
|
Yes, Pennywise
transforms itself into a wide number of forms
|
VOYEURISM?
|
None
|
MORAL OF THE STORY
|
You need to have a
better reason to make a 169-minute sequel than “there are some things in the
book that we didn’t include in the first one.”
|
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