It Gangbang Scene

It Gangbang Scene




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It Gangbang Scene
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Home Movies How It handles the book's most controversial scene
By Kevin P. Sullivan September 08, 2017 at 08:30 AM EDT
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How It handles the book's most controversial scene
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This post contains spoilers about Stephen King's It and the film adaptation out in theaters Friday.
When Stephen King 's It arrives in theaters on Friday, it will refamiliarize viewers with killer clown Pennywise, the novel's iconic antagonist who was so memorably brought to life by Tim Curry in the 1990 television miniseries based on King's book.
But what fans of that landmark television event won't see on screen is the novel's most controversial sequence: the climax's pre-teen orgy.
Toward the end of King's book — which typically runs over 1,000 pages in print editions and switches between timelines — our heroes, the Losers' Club, get lost in the Derry sewer system after defeating Pennywise … for the moment. Understanding that the group won't be able to escape without being unified, the gang's lone female member, Beverly, decides she needs to have sex with the six boys.
"I have an idea," Beverly said quietly.
In the dark, Bill heard a sound he could not immediately place. A whispery little sound, but not scary. Then there was a more easily place sound… a zipper. What— ? he thought, and then he realized what. He was undressing. For some reason, Beverly was undressing.
The plan works. As soon as Beverly has finished having sex with each of her friends, one of the boys immediately remembers where the group made a wrong turn and they subsequently escape.
As recent as 2013, King has commented on the scene, offering some explanation for its inclusion and expressing an understanding of how it's aged.
"I wasn't really thinking of the sexual aspect of it," King writes in a post on his official site's message board via his office manager Marsha DeFillipo. "The book dealt with childhood and adulthood — 1958 and Grown Ups. The grown ups don't remember their childhood. None of us remember what we did as children—we think we do, but we don't remember it as it really happened. Intuitively, the Losers knew they had to be together again. The sexual act connected childhood and adulthood. It's another version of the glass tunnel that connects the children's library and the adult library. Times have changed since I wrote that scene and there is now more sensitivity to those issues."
Removed from the context of the book, the scene obviously loses some of its significance — but it's hard to deny its problematic nature. Like the TV miniseries, the new film directed by Andy Muschietti — from a script credited to the film's previous director, Cary Fukunaga, as well as Chase Palmer, and Gary Dauberman — skips the sequence entirely. Once Pennywise is defeated, the Losers reappear outside the tunnels in the next scene, with no indication they got lost at all.
Dauberman, who took over writing duties when Fukunaga left the project, spoke with EW's Clark Collis about the scene and the production's debate over whether to include it in the film. "Besides Georgie in the sewer [the It opening], I think it's the one scene that everybody kind of brings up and it's such a shame," he says. "While it's an important scene, it doesn't define the book in any way I don't think and it shouldn't. We know what the intent was of that scene and why he put it in there, and we tried to accomplish what the intent was in a different way."
A 2014 draft supposedly written by Palmer and Fukunaga alone includes an interpretation of the sex scene, albeit a much cleaner alternative: After their climactic showdown with Pennywise, the Losers are lost in the tunnels. Beverly, sensing the boys' panic, takes each of their faces into her hands, providing the "light" they need to come together and escape.
While the original scene has been the subject of debate ever since the book's release in 1986, it has proven an interesting experiment in adaptation. Throughout King's career, he has pushed boundaries, especially in his depiction of adolescent sexuality, and the fact that the two produced adaptations of It have avoided the book's most challenging scene entirely is telling about the respective mediums and what happens when words on the page become light and sound.

Audiences at special screening of Stephen King's It scream in horror
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After months of growing excitement, the new adaptation of Stephen King’s It has finally reached cinemas, the infamous killer Pennywise returning to screens 27 years after being portrayed by Tim Curry.
Fans of the novel have questioned whether one of King’s most infamous scenes would make an appearance in the film.
After the Losers’ Club defeat Pennywise, they get lost in Derry’s sewer system. After coming to the realisation that they can’t escape without being unified, Beverly — the single female member — decides she needs to have sex with the six boys.
The text reads, via Entertainment Weekly : “I have an idea,” Beverly said quietly. In the dark, Bill heard a sound he could not immediately place. A whispery little sound, but not scary. Then there was a more easily place sound… a zipper. What—? he thought, and then he realised what. He was undressing. For some reason, Beverly was undressing.
After Beverly has had sex with each member, one of the boys instantly remembers the way out and they subsequently escape.
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In the film, rather than have the group getting lost in the sewer system, they instantly appear safe outside, director Andy Muschietti deciding to leave out the scene entirely.
Discussing the infamous scene with EW , one of the script’s authors, Gary Dauberman, revealed there was some debate over its inclusion, the original draft having the gang getting lost but Beverly touching their faces, providing each with the ‘light’ to get home.
“Besides Georgie in the sewer [the It opening], I think it’s the one scene that everybody kind of brings up and it’s such a shame,” Dauberman said. “While it’s an important scene, it doesn’t define the book in any way I don’t think and it shouldn’t. We know what the intent was of that scene and why he put it in there, and we tried to accomplish what the intent was in a different way.”
King has spoken about the scene numerous times, the most recent being in 2013. “I wasn’t really thinking of the sexual aspect of it,” King noted on an official message board, as confirmed by his manager.
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“The book dealt with childhood and adulthood — 1958 and Grown Ups. The grown ups don’t remember their childhood. None of us remember what we did as children—we think we do, but we don’t remember it as it really happened.
“Intuitively, the Losers knew they had to be together again. The sexual act connected childhood and adulthood. It’s another version of the glass tunnel that connects the children’s library and the adult library. Times have changed since I wrote that scene and there is now more sensitivity to those issues.”
Speaking to Vulture , King’s agent added another note from the author: “To it, I’d just add that it’s fascinating to me that there has been so much comment about that single sex scene and so little about the multiple child murders. That must mean something, but I’m not sure what.”
Whatever the case, Muschietti probably made a good decision not including the scene. It: Chapter One is currently playing in cinemas.
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Audiences at special screening of Stephen King's It scream in horror
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After months of growing excitement, the new adaptation of Stephen King’s It has finally reached cinemas, the infamous killer Pennywise returning to screens 27 years after being portrayed by Tim Curry.
Fans of the novel have questioned whether one of King’s most infamous scenes would make an appearance in the film.
After the Losers’ Club defeat Pennywise, they get lost in Derry’s sewer system. After coming to the realisation that they can’t escape without being unified, Beverly — the single female member — decides she needs to have sex with the six boys.
The text reads, via Entertainment Weekly : “I have an idea,” Beverly said quietly. In the dark, Bill heard a sound he could not immediately place. A whispery little sound, but not scary. Then there was a more easily place sound… a zipper. What—? he thought, and then he realised what. He was undressing. For some reason, Beverly was undressing.
After Beverly has had sex with each member, one of the boys instantly remembers the way out and they subsequently escape.
Cast: Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher, Adam Driver, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Oscar Isaac, and Lupita Nyong'o
Plot: No details yet, but it will continue directly on from Rey coming face-to-face with Luke at the end of The Force Awakens.
Cast: Chris Hemsworth, Tom Hiddleston, Cate Blanchett, Tessa Thompson, Jeff Goldblum, Karl Urban, and Mark Ruffalo
Plot: Story details are minimal as of now, but Thor's third return to screen has already been teased to feature a loose adaptation of the famous 'Planet Hulk' storyline.
Cast: Joaquin Phoenix, Alessandro Nivola
Plot: A war veteran's attempt to save a young girl from a sex trafficking ring goes horribly wrong.
Cast: Natalie Portman, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Tessa Thompson, and Oscar Isaac
Plot: A biologist's husband disappears. She thus puts her name forward for an expedition into an environmental disaster zone, but does not quite find what she's expecting. The expedition team is made up of the biologist, an anthropologist, a psychologist, and a surveyor.
Cast: J
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