Pennywise Explained: What Exactly Is Stephen King’s IT?
In both the book and the films, It is an ancient alien creature, older than civilization, and in King’s novel, older than our universe. It feasts on the flesh of humans simply because our fears are easy to manifest and they make us taste better. 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. That hunger for tasty, tasty, beautiful fear is pretty much the sole reason It returns to Derry, Maine every 27 years to torment and feed on the townsfolk before retreating into a new cycle of slumber.
Beyond Its physical form lies what It calls the deadlights, a sea of destructive orange lights that drive most humans insane upon sight. In the books, Bill nearly glimpses the deadlights and survives, but the only person to fully see the deadlights and recover is his wife Audra. In the film, it’s Beverly who glimpses the deadlights when Pennywise unhinges his jaw and reveals a peek at his true form. We also see subtle hints of the deadlights when Pennywise’s eye glow orange throughout the film, first when he terrorizes Mike and again when he retreats to the Well House after the Niebolt street battle.
When Beverly is shown the deadlights, she instantly goes catatonic and dead-eyed, floating in Pennywise’s cistern until Ben resurrects her with a classic true love’s kiss, but once she does, she recovers quickly. In the films, glimpsing the deadlights don’t seem to have the same devastating effect that it does in the novel, but there were some interesting side effects. In IT Chapter Two, we learn that Beverly was changed by that encounter, even when she couldn’t remember it. She already knew how Stan died, finishing his wife’s sentence on the phone, and as she explains later, she has seen them all die in her dreams every night since leaving Derry. Those turn out to be visions of the fates that await them if they fail to fight against It.
As you probably would expect from a celestial creature, It’s powers are not restricted to embodying your worst nightmare driving people insane with his space lights, but It is best known for Its shape-shifting abilities. Pennywise is only one of Its forms. In the film, we also see It become a mummy, Beverly’s dad, Mike’s burning parents, the creepy painting lady, a decapitated boy, a leper, and Georgie, and in the book, he takes many more forms, most famously, the classic Universal monsters.
It can also manipulate people into violent action, or sometimes, inaction that allows violence to continue. We see this in the film when Henry Bowers murders his father and sets out to kill the Losers, when the car drives by and leaves Ben helpless during Henry’s torment, and in the way It has spread through the town’s history like a cancerous corruption. In the book, Pennywise’s evil deeds are writ large in histories, flashbacks, and knowledge passed down to Mike from his grandfather.
In the first film, we get a glimpse of It’s far-reaching influence through Ben, who takes over Mike’s role as the resident history nerd. Ben explains Derry’s dark history, telling us that people die or disappear at six times the national average in their town… and that’s just the adults the kids are worse. “Way, way worse.” First, we learn about the Ironworks which inexplicably exploded in 1908 killing 102 people, including 88 children who were participating in an Easter egg hunt. We also hear about the Black Spot, a night club created by and for local black soldiers that was burned to the ground by a hate group in 1962 (1930 in the book).
There’s also a quick reference to the Bradley Gang in 1935, and a bit more details can be seen on the wall mural outside the butcher shop (where the Losers tend to Ben’s wounds). The Bradley Gang were an infamous group of bandits who robbed and killed multiple Derry shop owners before the townspeople rallied against them and shot them dead in the streets. In the novel, that story is passed on through creepy pharmacist #1, Mr. Keene and the book is filled with many, many more instances of how It has corrupted the history and town of Derry, from eating children to inciting violent chaos, Its fingerprints are all over the dark history of the town.
In Chapter Two, the ritual involves the collecting of totems from their forgotten childhood memories, which are then destroyed and It is meant to be collected in a basket. But the ritual doesn’t really work, and as Pennywise reveals, it never worked for the tribe either — he slaughtered them all. Ultimately, It is defeated by the unity of belief and display of power from the Losers. Chapter Two continually reinforces the theme that “all things must abide by the rules of the shape they inhabit” (also true for the mythology of the book, where it’s werewolf form was vulnerable to silver, etc.) That’s why Eddie can choke It and hurt It while It’s in the leper’s form.
With that in mind, the Losers try to force SpiderCrabPennywse into a smaller physical form, but when that plan fails, they realize they can make It feel small, draining It of Its power by taunting It with Its weaknesses. When Pennywise shrings down to the roughly the size of a giant baby, Mike reaches into Its chest and pulls out Its heart, which the Losers crush in their hands.






