In Defense of IT: Chapter Two

I’ve heard so many mixed opinions on IT: Chapter Two. I adored the first IT (not the Tim Curry one, the 2017 one), so I was super hesitant to even give Chapter Two a try, fearing that it would sour its predecessor in my mind. I bit the bullet and watched it anyway, and now I am both confused and just a little angry with the internet. Chapter Two was AMAZING. How anyone could watch that movie and not think it was incredibly well done is beyond me. It was thoughtful and well balanced and more than I even hoped it would be.
**Beware: Mild spoilers ahead, because I didn’t know how to write this without referring to the ending.**

Photo on the left: All the self-published physical books (except Beyond Redemption) that I own right now.
We the people of the United States of America have proclaimed for centuries that God has given us and the rest of humanity certain unalienable rights, rights that our forefathers outlined in the Declaration of Independence and Constitution and Bill of Rights. These rights include freedom of speech and press, but I believe that the freedom to read is an unspoken inclusion, one that our forefathers didn’t think to include because it seemed obvious. That’s my theory, anyway. In the land of the free and the home of the brave, it seems like a no-brainer that the freedom to read anything and everything, no matter who you are or where you live, is a freedom to be appreciated and protected. And yet, those who came to the New World in search of freedom started banning books before we were even a nation of our own.