It: Chapter Two runtime

Andy Muschietti Confirms Lengthy IT Chapter Two Runtime

Director Andy Muschietti has confirmed the lengthy runtime of his conclusion to 2017’s IT, and it will not be a short film. Speaking with Digital Spy, Muschietti said that IT: Chapter Two will run about two hours and 45 minutes.

At the beginning, when you’re writing and building the beats of the story, everything that you put in there seems very essential to the story,” Muschietti explained. “However, when you have the movie finally edited and it’s four hours long, you realize that some of the events and some of the beats can be easily lifted but the essence of the story remains intact. You cannot deliver a 4-hour movie because people will start to feel uncomfortable – no matter what they see – but we ended up having a movie that is 2 hours and 45 minutes, and the pacing is very good.

The director then added that “nobody who’s seen the movie has had any complaint.

RELATED: Shocking No One, IT Chapter Two Receives R-Rating From MPAA

The cast of IT: Chapter Two includes James McAvoy (X-Men franchise, Split) as Bill, Jessica Chastain (Crimson PeakThe Martian) as Beverly, Bill Hader (BarryTrainwreck) as Richie, Jay Ryan (Beauty and the Beast) as Ben and James Ransone (Generation Kill) as Eddie, with Andy Bean (Here and Now) as Stanely Uris, Isaiah Mustafa as Mike, Teach Grant (Altered CarbonDamnation) as Henry Bowers, Jess Weixler (The SonChained for Life) as Bill’s wife, Xavier Dolan (Boy Erased) as Adrian Mellon, Will Beinbrink (Queen of the South) as Tom Rogan and, of course, the return of Bill Skarsgård as the clown Pennywise.

Pick up a copy of the first part of IT here.

The second part of IT is written by Gary Dauberman from the book by Stephen King. Muschietti, once again, is at the helm.

RELATED: Gary Dauberman Talks IT: Chapter 2 Gore and Salem’s Lot

IT debuted in September of last year to the tune of $123.1 million on opening weekend, the highest opening weekend ever for a September release, for a fall release, and for a horror movie. It clocked in just $9 million behind Deadpool for the second-highest opening for an R-rated movie. The film earned over $700 million at the worldwide box office, making it the highest-grossing horror movie of all time.

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