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Tag: Chris Chalk

  • What’s the Deal With Hallorann’s Terrifying Box on ‘It: Welcome to Derry’?

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    In the most recent episode of It: Welcome to Derry, we saw various characters—heavily armed Air Force guys, a member of the local Indigenous community wielding an alien dagger, and a group of awkward young teens—slip into the sewers under 29 Neibolt Street in search of you-know-who. We know they’re chasing an entity that delights in taking the form of Pennywise the Dancing Clown; at this point in Welcome to Derry‘s storyline, however, nobody’s quite certain what they’re looking for. They just know it’s got mind-control powers and is propelled by pure evil.

    One of those Air Force guys happens to be Dick Hallorann (Chris Chalk), who’s been singled out by the military for this unconventional mission thanks to his psychic powers. Stephen King fans are already very familiar with this character, especially because of Scatman Crothers’ enduring performance as an older Hallorann in Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 adaptation of The Shining. In Welcome to Derry, we’ve gotten to know the younger Hallorann. He’s cockier and a bit more tightly wound, and he’s learned to keep the scarier aspects of his gifts under control—to a point.

    As episode five, “29 Neibolt Street,” reveals, It worms into Hallorann’s mind to exploit his memories of his abusive grandfather. Hallorann and his grandmother, who also had psychic powers, cower as his grandfather looms over them, cruelly taunting them. Then, the worst thing Hallorann can imagine happens: the elderly man, who’s really Pennywise in disguise, opens the box and frees all the horrors Hallorann’s been very carefully tucking away.

    In the vision, the mental creation appears as a real box, filled with an orange glow just like Pennywise’s deadlight eyes.

    When a dazed Hallorann emerges from the sewer at the end of the episode, he sees Pauly (Rudy Mancuso), a soldier who was killed moments earlier in the tunnel. He should not be up and walking, but he is—and Hallorann can quite clearly see him.

    Welcome to Derry hasn’t yet given much context around Hallorann’s mental lockbox beyond just showing it to us—and making sure we understand that opening it was a very bad thing. Clearly, it’s something Hallorann is going to have to work through if he wants to be a functional person again. But the box exists in previous material introduced about the character, notably King’s Shining sequel Doctor Sleep.

    In the 2019 Mike Flanagan movie version, Carl Lumbly plays a ghostly version of the character who appears to Danny Torrance (not long after the events at the Overlook) with some helpful advice. About… mental boxes. You can find Doctor Sleep on Netflix now to watch the scene in full, but it includes a callback to Hallorann’s famous line from The Shining about how the dark things that Danny can perceive with his “shining” powers can’t physically hurt him. They’re like “pictures in a book.”

    The old man also tells Danny that dark things will flock to him because of his abilities. There’s nothing he can do to stop them from coming. “My grandfather, he was a mean son of a bitch,” he explains. “When he died, I danced… but he kept on coming back.”

    Hallorann pulls out a small box and says that his grandmother taught him a trick. “I want you to know this box inside and out,” he tells the boy; earlier in the movie, we’d seen that Danny is still being haunted by the creepy ghost from room 237.  “You’re gonna build one just like it in your mind. One even more special. So next time that bitch comes around, you’ll be ready.”

    He’ll be ready to trap the ghost and all its adjacent negativity and bad vibes in his mental box, in other words. It’s a great idea, and perhaps this version of Hallorann didn’t have to deal with what our guy in Welcome to Derry is going through now. What’s going to happen with all the clingy spirits who come calling now?

    Speaking to Decider, Chalk and It: Welcome to Derry co-showrunner Jason Fuchs shared a little more insight into Hallorann’s trauma.

    “All the terror that he has ever seen, he just slipped it in the box, slipped it in the box, slipped it in the box,” Chalk explained about his character. “So the moment you unleash that, it’s not going to come out as gently as Dick put it in and it’s not happy about being shoved in a box. These are not entities that want to be trapped. And so when they can break free, they do, and it changes Dick forever.”

    Added Fuchs, “That very last shot you see of Dick, of Chris Chalk, in [episode five] of him seeing dead Pauly in front of him on the bank of the river, that is going to take Dick to some extremely dark places, to a place he’s tried to get away from. There’s a reason he wanted to keep that box shut. His life by the end of episode five has been fully upended in ways that will take him to the breaking point and possibly past [it] in the episodes to come.”

    New episodes of It: Welcome to Derry arrive Sundays on HBO and HBO Max.

     

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • Meet the New Characters of ‘It: Welcome to Derry’—Plus One Returning Stephen King Favorite

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    It: Welcome to Derry will be floating into your nightmares very soon, and while the kids—Pennywise’s favorite feast—will be front and center, adult characters also take a prominent role in the story. Most folks we meet have been created for the HBO series, which is set in 1962 and is a prequel to the events of the It movies. But every Stephen King fan who’s ever checked into the Overlook Hotel knows Dick Hallorann.

    Chris Chalk (The Newsroom, Shining Girls) plays the psychically gifted character—most famously seen in The Shining—in It: Welcome to Derry. As he told io9 at a recent HBO press day, he’s well aware of the legacy crafted by Scatman Crothers—who memorably portrayed Hallorann in the 1980 Stanley Kubrick movie—as well as Carl Lumbly (in 2019’s Doctor Sleep) and Melvin Van Peebles (in the 1997 Shining miniseries). But he’s here to present his own interpretation of the character.

    “In order to create and manifest this version of Dick Halloran, I did observe those performances, but I didn’t—’study’ is too strong a word, because that’s not what we’re doing,” Chalk said. “If we were doing Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining in 2025, then I’m going to study that performance in a different way, but all I have to do is see who he is now and break him down backwards to who he was in an earlier time, and then it becomes about creative freedom and the text. So it’s awesome to have all of these options of people who’ve had their versions of the performance, but just as they had their version, I knew I was going to get my version. Nobody asked me to mimic anybody.”

    Chris Chalk as Dick Hallorann. © Brooke Palmer/HBO

    The younger version of Hallorann that we meet in It: Welcome to Derry is an airman stationed at the Air Force base just outside of town. This particular military installation has a fenced-off “Special Projects” area, where Hallorann’s abilities are pressed into service by General Shaw (James Remar). No spoilers on what they’re trying to accomplish, but Hallorann gets certain privileges due to his unique importance to the mission. The drawback is, all those mental gymnastics take a painful toll.

    “I think the fact that Dick is even participating in this [mission] is proof that he’ll do anything to not be trapped,” Chalk said. “The worst thing he could possibly do to himself, he has to ultimately do in order to escape this idea of being trapped by General Shaw. He has to essentially assault himself and reopen trauma and reopen trauma and reopen trauma. But he wants to escape it so bad that he’s like, ‘Okay, I’ll cut myself if it’ll get me out of this.’ It’s a great thing to get to play a person at their weakest, most fragile, and most desperate points. Like, that’s what we want: to get to dig into the depths of a human.”

    Elsewhere in the story, we encounter Hank Grogan, played by Stephen Rider (Daredevil, Luke Cage). He’s the single dad of young Ronnie (Amanda Christine) and the projectionist at Derry’s downtown movie theater. Early in It: Welcome to Derry, he’s dragged into some messy drama that ties into the show’s examination of America, circa 1962—a place full of problems even when there’s not a demonic clown in the picture.

    Hankandronnie
    Hank and Ronnie. © HBO

    Hank is a new character, but Rider had a lot of reference points even without pages from a King novel to consider.

    “The thing about backstory is, it’s not like you’re going to tell it,” he explained. “It’s more about being very clear on his point of view and the world that he comes from and what he values. The fact that it’s the 1960s and he grew up in the 1920s and 1930s and where his parents came from, in terms of even slavery—it’s a lot to draw on. And most of us came up, or our parents came up, through the Great Migration. So there were a lot of things that I had access to. But backstories are tricky because they can become very fantastical. So if all of a sudden I’m like, ‘What do I do with this? It sounds good, but I don’t know what I’m doing with this.’ So I had to make sure it served Hank, not just Stephen’s fantastical world.”

    More newcomers in It: Welcome to Derry are played by Jovan Adepo (3 Body Problem, The Leftovers) and Taylour Paige (The Toxic Avenger), though their last name is one It fans will recognize: Hanlon. As the show begins, Major Leroy Hanlon has just been transferred to Derry, with his wife, Charlotte, and their son, Will (Blake James), in tow.

    Major Hanlon, we soon learn, has a quality that would be unique in any context, but it’s especially intriguing in a haunted place like Derry: he is literally a man without fear.

    “It’s something that occurred through a brain injury, and I think it’s something that he wants to disregard every time someone brings it up, because it does recall a moment in his military career that he’s just not wanting to re-experience,” Adepo said. “I spoke to [director] Andy [Muschietti] about the specifics of the injury and what it truly means to be without fear in this town where the show is about being afraid. I leaned more on the side of not being completely immune to fear but just having a higher threshold for it. And if it’s the most guttural fear that I’m immune to, the other sub-elements of fear are heightened as far as, you know, insecurity, worry, doubt, shame, and any of those smaller elements of it. I never played Leroy as he’s just impervious to any type of jarring moments; he’s just able to withstand a bit more unless it’s something that he really, really cares about, which we can assume is his family.”

    It Welcome To Derry Hanlon Family
    The Hanlons move to Derry in episode one. © Brooke Palmer/HBO

    Charlotte was active in the civil rights movement in Louisiana, where the Hanlons lived before moving to Maine. Leroy would much rather his wife keep a low profile, especially since he’s trying to advance his military career. But Derry has its share of injustices that catch Charlotte’s interest, and it’s hard for her to resist speaking up for what’s right.

    “I think she’s kind of bursting at the seams,” Paige said. “Living in that dissonance is very uncomfortable. Like you’re at home vacuuming and thinking about what to make for dinner, but you also have a sense that you have a lot to offer the world, and you’re curious and interested, and nobody really cares because you look like you. It’s a little bit sad, it’s lonely, it’s boredom, and it’s just living in a world that doesn’t respect or value what you have to offer. I think that’s a really tough inner world, so her inner world is challenging and lonely.”

    She added, “I think Charlotte knows her husband’s heart is in the right place, but she’s also confronting [him about] defending a country [that hasn’t given us anything back], and that’s challenging. So [part of their marriage is] kind of understanding [that] this is our lives as Black people in 1962 and what opportunity means and how to kind of climb out of what you were born with.”

    It: Welcome to Derry premieres October 26 on HBO.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • Bill Skarsgård’s Pennywise Returns for It Prequel Series

    Bill Skarsgård’s Pennywise Returns for It Prequel Series

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    Image: Warner Bros.

    It and It: Chapter Two star Bill Skarsgård (Nosferatu) has officially signed back on to reprise the role of sewer-dwelling, child-eating clown Pennywise for Max’s Welcome to Derry series. The returning Pennywise joins castmates Taylour Paige, Jovan Adepo, Chris Chalk, and James Remar.

    According to Deadline, Skarsgård will also executive produce the show along with his fellow It film franchise creative team at Warner Bros. The show was inspired by the Stephen King novel It and was developed by the franchise’s director Andy Muschietti with producer Barbara Muschietti. They’re also joined by Chapter Two co-producer Jason Fuchs with the films’ other producers, Roy Lee and Dan Lin. Now with Skarsgård in the mix, we’re excited for more horror in the prequel series. Muschietti is set to direct four episodes out of the nine in the series order.

    Recently, Bill Skarsgård starred in Boy Kills World and will be featured as Eric Draven in the upcoming The Crow reboot, while Andy Muschietti remained in the Warner Bros. family with The Flash. Needless to say, we are excited to see them team up again with more world-building and creepy killer clownery in the Stephen King universe. Their take on It has become the quintessential one garnering $1.17 billion worldwide. And in an age with ever-expanding mythologies, characters like Pennywise can keep floating on in horror infamy as long as he wants.

    Stay tuned at io9 for Welcome to Derry updates!


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel and Star Wars releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about House of the Dragon and Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power.

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    Sabina Graves

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