IT/イット THE END “それ”が見えたら、終わり。

作品情報

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カテゴリ 映画
ジャンル
ホラー
スリラー
概要 小さな田舎町で再び起きた連続児童失踪事件。幼少時代、“それ”の恐怖から生き延びたルーザーズ・クラブの仲間たちは、27年前に固く誓い合った<約束>を果たすために町に戻ることを決意する。だが“それ”は、より変化自在に姿を変え、彼らを追い詰めていくのだった……。
キャスト(俳優・女優・声優)
Young Bill Denbrough(ジェイデン・リーバハー
Young Stanley Uris(ワイアット・オレフ
Young Ben Hanscom(Jeremy Ray Taylor
Young Eddie Kaspbrak(Jack Dylan Grazer
Young Beverly Marsh(Sophia Lillis
Young Richie Tozier(フィン・ウルフハード
Young Mike Hanlon(Chosen Jacobs
Richie Tozier(ビル・ヘイダー
Eddie Kaspbrak(James Ransone
Stanley Uris(Andy Bean
Ben Hanscom(Jay Ryan
Henry Bowers(Teach Grant
Audra Phillips(Jess Weixler
Victoria Fuller(Ryan Kiera Armstrong
Don Hagarty(Taylor Frey
Victor Criss(Logan Thompson
Victoria's Mom(Kelly Van der Burg
Stanley's Dad(アリ・コーエン
Richie's Mom(Janet Porter
Belch Huggins(Jake Sim
Hobo / The Witch(Javier Botet
Young Gretta(Megan Charpentier
Alvin Marsh(Stephen Bogaert
Young Henry Bowers(Nicholas Hamilton
Dead Hockstetter(オーウェン・ティーグ
Myra / Sonia Kaspbrak(Molly Atkinson
Mrs. Kersh(Joan Gregson
Patty(Martha Girvin
Chris Unwin(Katie Lunman
Mr. Keene(Joe Bostick
Gretta(Juno Rinaldi
Chief Borton(Neil Crone
Connor(Ry Prior
Carny(Connor Smith
Waitress(Amanda Zhou
Meaner Nurse(Rob Ramsay
John Koontz (Juniper Hill Security)(John Connon
Head Honcho(Doug MacLeod
Big Guy(Brandon Crane
Scuzzah(Erik Junnola
Scuzzah(Josh Madryga
Shokopiwah Shaman(Peter George Commanda
Shokopiwah Man(Kevin Allan Hess
Shokopiwah Man(Stephen R. Hart
Shokopiwah Man(Rocky L. Burnham Jr.
Shokopiwah Man(Billy Merasty
Shokopiwah Young Boy(Sladen Peltier
Theatre P.A.(Alex Bird
Shouting Kid(Brody Bover
Shouting Kid's Mom(Edie Inksetter
Janitor(Martin Julien
Fishtank Girl(Sonia Maria Chirila
Bully(Declan Prior
Bully(Marko Vujicic
Nurse(Eric Woolfe
Dean's Mom(Kate Corbett
Dean's Dad(Shawn Storer
Customer(Scott Edgecombe
The Butcher(Anthony Ulc
Swearing Patient(J. Bogdan
Audra's Assistant(Louise Stratten
Production Assistant(Laura Thorne
Assistant Director(Thomas Duhig
Police Officer(Carla Guerrier
Dean's Friend(Liam MacDonald
Dean's Friend(Chris D'Silva
4-Year-Old Young Mike(Tristan Levi Cox
4-Year-Old Young Mike(Torian Matthew Cox
Betty Ripsom's Legs(Lola Del Re Hudson
Twitchy Man(Thiago Dos Santos
Shokopiwah Woman(Kiley May
Shokopiwah Woman(Lisa Cromarty
Audience Member (uncredited)(Vanzie Meyer
Bully(Colin Mcleod
公開日 2019-09-04
製作会社
New Line Cinema
Vertigo Entertainment
Double Dream
Rideback

AIに聞いてみた!作品へのポイント

「IT/イット THE END」のおもしろいポイントは、恐怖を描写する手法が非常に巧みであり、視聴者を緊張感の中に引き込む点です。特に、それが取り憑く姿や恐怖の表現が斬新であり、見る者に強烈な印象を残します。また、幼少時代のトラウマと成長した姿との対比が興味深く描かれており、キャラクターたちの心情や成長が描かれる点も魅力的です。

おすすめするポイントは、ストーリーの展開がスリリングであり、予測不可能な展開が多いことです。また、友情や成長、過去と現在の対比など、深いテーマが描かれているので、単なるホラー映画以上の感動や考えさせられる要素も楽しめます。

この作品は、ホラー映画やスリラーが好きな人におすすめです。特に、原作のファンや幼少時代のトラウマを持つ人には、より共感できる部分があるかもしれません。また、キャラクターの成長や友情を重視する人にもおすすめです。

一方、おすすめしないポイントとしては、恐怖やグロテスクな描写が苦手な人には向かないかもしれません。また、長時間の上映時間や緊張感の連続で、リラックスした気持ちで観たいという人には不向きかもしれません。

『IT/イット THE END “それ”が見えたら、終わり。』に関連する画像(全54件)

『IT/イット THE END “それ”が見えたら、終わり。』に関連する動画(全6件)

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“それ”は、ある日突然現れる。一見、平和で静かな田舎町を突如、恐怖が覆い尽くす。相次ぐ児童失踪事件。内気な少年ビルの弟も、ある大雨の日に外出し、通りにおびただしい血痕を残して消息を絶った。悲しみに暮れ、自分を責めるビルの前に、突如“それ”は現れる。“それ”を目撃して以来、恐怖にとり憑かれるビル。しかし、得体の知れない恐怖を抱えることになったのは、彼だけではなかった。不良少年たちにイジメの標的にされている子どもたちも“それ”に遭遇していた。自分の部屋、地下室、バスルーム、学校、図書館、そして町の中……何かに恐怖を感じる度に“それ”は、どこへでも姿を現す。ビルとその秘密を共有することになった仲間たちは“それ”に立ち向かうことを決意するのだが…。真相に迫るビルたちを、さらに大きな恐怖が飲み込もうとしていた―。

1981年、犯罪が多発する大都会ゴッサムシティ。ピエロの仕事をしているアーサーは貧しく、老いた母親ペニーと暮らす上、突然笑いだしてしまうという心の病に悩むが、TV界の人気司会者フランクリンを憧れの対象にして日々耐え忍んでいた。ある日、失業したアーサーは地下鉄で、女性客に嫌がらせをしていた男性3人組を偶然持っていた拳銃で皆殺しにしてしまう。以後アーサーは、自身の心にあった怒りを解放させていく。

A young bride's wedding night turns into her worst nightmare when her ridiculously rich in-laws force her to play a gruesome game of hide-and-seek.

巨大な電気嵐が近未来の地球を襲い、各地で不慮の災害や事故が発生。自らもそのせいで危うく命を落としかけた宇宙飛行士のロイは、ある極秘情報を聞かされて驚く。かつて初の太陽系外有人探査計画の司令官として宇宙へ旅立ち、その後消息を絶った父のクリフォードが実はまだ生きていて、彼が今なお続行中の実験のせいで電気嵐が生じ、このままでは太陽系に壊滅的危機が訪れるというのだ。かくしてロイは父に会いに宇宙へと旅立つ。

ハロウィンの夜。町外れの幽霊屋敷に入った高校生たちが見つけた本には、数々の怖い話がつづられていた。翌日から本を見つけた仲間が一人ずつ姿を消し、さらに本には毎夜新たな物語が書き加えられていった。主人公は消息不明の高校生たちで、そこには彼らが最も怖いものに襲われる物語が書かれていた。

The Movie Database(TMDB)で登録されたこの作品に対するレビュー・評価

8pt

‘It Chapter 2’ isn’t as stable or as refined a film as its predecessor, and while it feels lacking by comparison, it’s still far better than most studio horror films. It’s epic, ambitious, crazy, witty and unafraid to go for the heart as well as the throat. As a whole, this adaptation of maybe Stephen King’s greatest work feels singular in the landscape of modern horror cinema: two films built on strong interconnected relationships spread over decades, as sentimental as they are vicious, and executed on the scale of a fantasy epic. They also may be amongst the best adaptations of King’s work, understanding what makes his writing (and this novel in particular) so horrifying and so arresting, the human horror amongst the fantastical. Andy Muschietti aimed big with ‘It’, and even in the moments its reach exceeds its grasp, you’re still so glad it reached so high in the first place.
- Daniel Lammin

Read Daniel's full article...
https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-it-chapter-2-the-ambitious-conclusion-to-the-beloved-horror-epic

5pt

If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog :)

So, Chapter Two is a sequel to It (2017), and my expectations were a bit high. I really enjoyed the latter to the point of considering it one of the year’s best, as well as one of the best Stephen King cinematic adaptations. Andy Muschietti returning to the director’s chair and having such a fantastic cast portraying the adult versions of the Losers (not only in terms of quality acting but also regarding how well the adults look like the older versions of the young actors) are two of the main reasons why I was genuinely excited. Also, the runtime (longest horror movie ever?!) definitely left me wondering how a horror flick could have the same duration of some of the most epic films in cinema…

Well, I got to be honest: I’m disappointed. It’s not a bad movie, at all, but it doesn’t even come close to its predecessor’s heels. I disagree with some headlines I’ve read though. Some say the comedy was misplaced, taking away impact from emotional or dark moments. There’s barely a moment where it was expected seriousness and laughter kicked in instead, but when it does occur, it actually works. I just think it wasn’t as funny as the previous film, overall. Granted, Bill Hader as Richie Tozier is hilarious, and a perfect cast as an adult Finn Wolfhard. His chemistry with James Ransone (Eddie Kaspbrak) resembles the one Wolfhard, and Jack Dylan Grazer had, therefore this/these duo(s) being the comedy highlight.

Some say the movie is too long. Now, this is a tricky one. Usually, when people feel bored or not as entertained as they wanted to be, they tend to blame it on the film’s runtime, especially if it’s over 100 minutes. I agree that the movie FEELS long, but I disagree that the runtime is too long. There’s more than enough story to explore, and literally, every single character from the Losers Club has an interesting arc. The problem here is that not all of them are explored in a way that’s funny, scary, or just captivating enough. The fact that Jessica Chastain’s (Beverly Marsh) sequence with the old lady is entirely displayed in one of the trailers (and consequently shown at every single screening) doesn’t help the pacing.

The first act is pretty decent. As expected, it shows us where everyone is, what they’re doing for a living, and how they get back together. During this act, it’s pretty clear that Muschietti is going to give time to develop each character and follow their respective arcs to the end, hence the lengthy runtime. However, the second act falls flat. Bill Denbrough (James McAvoy / Jaeden Martell) has the most emotionally impactful storyline, one that affects the main plot, making the time that is spent with him worth it. Same goes for Richie’s subplot. On the opposite side, the rest of the group doesn’t have entertaining sequences or new developments whatsoever.

Beverly continues to be affected by her childhood of abuse from her father. Ben Hanscom (Jay Ryan / Jeremy Ray Taylor) keeps being in love with Bev. Eddie is still a whiny little “kid” who’s scared of everything that might make him ill. Stanley Uris (Andy Bean / Wyatt Oleff) doesn’t do anything, and Mike Hanlon is surprisingly the engine that moves the plot forward, which is a problem of its own since I never really cared for that character (he was definitely the one put aside in the 2017’s movie). Honestly, he just serves as an exposition device considering he spends the whole time just explaining everything the audience needs to know to understand where the film is going.

Finally, the third act is a mixed bag. While it does provide a climactic ending with a sweet message, it feels very much like its predecessor. I don’t want to spoil anything, but it’s incredibly repetitive comparing to the first movie. Considering all things together, it’s a big letdown since it feels like the exact same film, but with older versions of the characters. Obviously, each of them has a different arc in this one, something the first didn’t have the time to explore, but looking at the main story, it’s pretty much the exact same thing, including how it ends (just with a minor twitch). Nevertheless, the performances are all great…

James McAvoy continues his streak of amazing displays, and Bill Hader has to be the MVP for the range he demonstrates. I wish Skarsgård had more time to shine as Pennywise, though. In 2017, I thought he really nailed the character and made it his own. Unfortunately, this time around, Pennywise doesn’t have that much screentime (such a disappointment), and when it appears, it often looks too CGI-ish, taking away from the gripping performance of its actor. The finale has almost no Bill Skarsgård since there’s so much CGI. Despite that, I congratulate the team(s) behind the makeup, hairstyling, costume, and production design. Derry looks terrific, and the time jumps between the young and the old gang worked seamlessly partially due to these visual achievements.

Andy Muschietti knows how to work a camera, and the movie is very well-shot. However, he should have been able to come up with creative sequences to deliver a different level of entertainment, especially during the tiresome second act. Gary Dauberman’s screenplay is clever, and it brings this enormous story to a fitting conclusion, but he also could have imagined some new ideas for some of the characters. There are a couple of great sequences though, especially one with Bill going through a theme park tent with illusions.

In the end, It Chapter Two fails to deliver a conclusion worthy of its epic runtime. Even with a phenomenal cast, it isn’t as funny, as scary or even as captivating as its predecessor. Its runtime is appropriated having in mind that each character has a personal arc, but only a couple of them are genuinely compelling and entertaining. Therefore, the film feels too long, uneven, and it could have used a bit more creativity when it comes to its climactic finale. Its central story feels very similar to the last movie, its scary sequences are nowhere near the quality seen before, and even though the costume and production design are top-notch, there’s excessive use of CGI on Pennywise. It still carries some emotionally convincing moments, as well as a couple of cool sequences. Overall, it’s … okay.

Rating: C

9pt

It's the love story between Richie and Eddie that makes this movie worth viewing twice. Looking forward to the conclusion!

7pt

A pretty odd choice too undercut every scare in the movie, but I was less disappointed with _Chapter Two_ than everyone else seems to be. I gave it the same star rating as the first Muscietti _It_ movie, but if I'm being honest, that one was definitely better. Doesn't make this bad though.

_Final rating:★★★½ - I really liked it. Would strongly recommend you give it your time._

7pt

Wasn't a huge fan of the first but did like the young cast but the scares were non-existent. This sequel had a couple okay moments and I did like the characters as adults, but Bill Hader easily was the standout. Still wasn't very scary yet even with the lengthy running time never felt like it dragged. One day I may try watching the two back to back, but between the two, not overly impressive. **3.5/5**

7pt

“You lied and I died!”

Making us proud Georgie.

I re-watched the 1990 mini-series and 2017 remake last month in preparation for this movie in terms of judging in quality. The 90's version had it moments, but I find some scenes unintentionally funny where it reeked of early Stephen King adaptations. 2017 was surprisingly good and a massive improvement, but laid back on cheap thrills.

‘IT: Chapter Two’ was a tough act to follow up on after the monster success of the first and with the second chapter being the hardest to adapt. I thought the movie both succeeds and stumbles in parts. Although reflecting back makes it feel more like a parody than a serious horror movie. An epic finale that ended in a over the top fashion - with themes of childhood trauma and the idea of holding on to the past despite growing up with age are sprinkled through out. The loser club are all grown up now and returning home to kill IT.

Whoever cast the grow up version of the loser club deserves massive praise here, because it’s pitch perfect casting and I could definitely see the child stars growing up to be the adult stars. James McAvoy, Jessica Chastain, Jay Ryan, and Isaiah Mustafa were all great in bringing the more dramatic aspects to the film. While Bill Hader and James Ranson bring the comedic aspects, but not to say they weren't dramatic as well, even making me tear up at one point.

Bill Skarsgard was truly amazing as Pennywise. The physicality in his movement has a certain silliness that you would expect to see from a clown, yet predatory with his animal-like attacks with drool running down his mouth and eyes staring in opposite directions despite looking straight at you. I find the dancing clown incredibly terrifying whenever he becomes playful and kind to deceive children.

Andy Muschietti truly shines as a director when it comes to bizarre imagery and unsettling camera angles, while also capturing some real emotions through the lens. The opening scene at the bridge where a homophobic attack takes place was really brutal and starts the movie off strong - on par with the Georgie meets Pennywise scene in the first movie.

Despite the run time being nearly three hours long, but I can’t recall ever being bored. It moved at a even pace in my opinion. I guess a few scenes could’ve been cut as most of it is unused footage from the first movie. Although it would be difficult to cut scenes as everything follows up to the next scene and that emotional punch towards the end wouldn’t be earned.

Now for the issues:

Henry Bowers was completely pointless in this movie and was only used for jump scars. Same thing with Mike, who through out these movies has nothing to do and the important things he did in the book was given to different characters.

I didn’t like how Stan’s suicide was handle, because you find out he actually “sacrificed” himself to save the others.

Some of the humor didn’t always land, especially if it’s right after a tense scene where it kinda deflates the horror. At times I struggled to gasp what the film marker was going for in certain scenes. Is this scene suppose to be scary or funny? Both maybe?

I wish there was more practical work for the monster scenes instead of CGI, because at times it looked really terrible. The finale battle at the end could’ve been in a video game boss fight.

* Overall rating: Not as strong as the first, but still enjoyed it. Still, let’s kill this f**king clown.**strong text**

8pt

A step down, but <em>'It Chapter Two'</em> is still a very good film.

It is, I will say, overly long, it did bore me a little at the midway point; not in a necessarily negative way, I just wanted more. However, it regains its footing with an entertaining ending. I'm usually not a fan of cast changes in film series, but this does it to good effect. I love the characters, whether it be in this film or the preceding entry.

Jessica Chastain and Bill Hader are great choices to play the older versions of Sophia Lillis and Finn Wolfhard, they are very convincing casts. James McAvoy is also a positive addition, while Bill Skarsgård remains enjoyable as It.

The score is, again, strong. I like the plot, even if I do feel like it's stretched out and could've had more freshness added to it. It isn't as creepy as the first film either, but still has a solid amount of uneasiness.

5pt

I watched the two films in a double bill and I really did want to enjoy this as much as I did the first - but boy, could this have been much more of a let down? The original has a far better cast; snappier direction and a much tighter script. This just rumbles along with a staccato, portmanteau-style storyline that robs the narrative of much of the cohesion of it's earlier, much more compelling, iteration. The ending is straight out of "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" (2004) without the roller skates and the pretty feeble efforts from Jessica Chastain and James McAvoy really don't help keep it on track at all!. Sadly, disappointing marshmallow monster mayhem.

1pt

How does a movie with no story become 3 hours long?

Seriously, it's a real question.

Nothing seems to happen... ever... and they virtue signal by changing a character, because you have to now... but nothing really happens for most of the movie.

And the horror felt a bit like a kids movie.

But ultimately it's 3 hours with no real plot.

10pt

Chapter 2 was more awesome then the first. I even got a little freaked out myself on some parts. This has easily become one of my favorite horror films of all time.

この作品に対するレビュー・評価

8pt

『IT/イット THE END "それ"が見えたら、終わり。』のおもしろいポイントは、まず登場するキャラクターたちの心情描写が非常にリアルで深い点です。彼らは幼少期に恐ろしい出来事を経験し、27年後に再び立ち向かうことになりますが、その過去と現在の葛藤や成長が丁寧に描かれています。特に、友情や恐怖、愛情などの複雑な感情がリアルに描かれており、キャラクターたちの心の変化が物語をより深みのあるものにしています。

また、作品全体を通して演出される恐怖の要素も見逃せません。"それ"と呼ばれる存在は、恐怖心を煽るだけでなく、登場するシーンや演出が非常に緻密でリアルなため、視聴者を本当に恐怖させることに成功しています。特に、"それ"が変幻自在に姿を変える能力を持っているため、常に予測不能な展開が続き、観る者を緊張感に包み込みます。

さらに、作品全体にはホラー要素だけでなく、友情や成長、過去と現在の対比など、さまざまなテーマが織り交ぜられている点も魅力的です。キャラクターたちが直面する恐怖だけでなく、それを乗り越えるために必要な絆や勇気、成長が描かれており、単なるホラー作品以上の深いメッセージが込められています。

総じて、『IT/イット THE END "それ"が見えたら、終わり。』は、恐怖だけでなくキャラクターの心情や成長、さまざまなテーマが絡み合い、観る者を引き込む魅力に満ちた作品と言えます。

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