IT 3: Welcome To Derry (2025)lh

Rain needles Main Street; a single red balloon taps a storm drain like a metronome. Bill Skarsgård slips back into that impossible grin, the edit stuttering whenever his eyes find the lens. The town colludes: streetlights blink yes, manholes breathe, and missing posters rearrange themselves when no one’s looking.

A new circle of kids follows breadcrumb chalk through a flooded library, a covered bridge stitched with flyers, and a carnival that shouldn’t be here yet. Calliope notes sour; jump‑rope rhymes rot. Set‑pieces bite hard—a mirror maze that shows you as bait, a quarry phone ringing underwater, a parade frozen mid‑smile while something moves between floats.

Adults hear laughter on dead lines; the scoreboard counts down from 27 on its own. Derry isn’t haunted; it’s complicit. The cut builds to a cruel wink: a paper boat sails uphill, the balloon pops into confetti with teeth, and the sewer grates whisper, “Welcome back.”