Promo image of a car driving past the Welcome to Derry billboard surrounded by fog and trees
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IT: Welcome to Derry Review – Fear, Nostalgia, and Pennywise’s Shadow

IT Welcome to Derry Review: Still of Lily screaming with her face covered in blood

This isn’t just another horror prequel. It’s the beginning of fear, memory, and something ancient waking up

IT: Welcome to Derry Review – Fear, Nostalgia, and Pennywise’s Shadow

Some shows don’t ease you in. They stalk you first. They watch you remember. IT: Welcome to Derry feels like that kind of horror. A familiar nightmare returning, except older, stranger and meaner. And I’ll be honest. Going into this series I expected another cash grab prequel that tries to feed off nostalgia and Stephen King’s legacy. But two episodes in and my IT: Welcome to Derry Review is already more complicated than that.

This isn’t just a story about clowns or missing kids. It feels like the anatomy of fear. The kind you inherit. The kind you pretend isn’t there even when it sits beside you.

IT Welcome to Derry Review: Still of Matty attempting to flee the movie theater
IT Welcome to Derry Review: Fear doesn’t start with Pennywise but with the moment a child realizes the rules no longer apply.

A Horror Story That Remembers Its Roots

There’s something almost affectionate about how Welcome to Derry handles its own lore. Not subtle, but not tacky either. The show remembers the IT universe and the cinematic language that shaped it. The pipes. The drains. The eerie children’s rhymes. The impossible geometry of nightmares.

But here is the surprising part. There is no Pennywise yet. No iconic smile. No balloon floating ominously in frame. Instead there is a feeling. A pressure. Like the clown is watching from the rafters waiting for the right moment to blink into existence.

Right now the horror feels subtle and looming, not loud or chaotic. And honestly I like that. I want the dread to sit with me a bit longer.

IT Welcome to Derry Review: Still images of Lily, Susie, Phil, Teddy watching the cinema screen and Veronica alone in her bedroom
IT Welcome to Derry Review: The fear isn’t lurking in the shadows, it’s sitting right beside them, waiting for something to break.

Fear Is a Character Here

The horror in IT: Welcome to Derry does not arrive with jump scares or loud chaos. Instead, it settles into the bones of the story. The first two episodes build fear slowly in a way that feels intentional, intimate and unsettling. The show seems less interested in shocking the audience and more focused on letting dread sink in until it feels lived in.

One of the earliest scenes that struck me was the moment in the car with Matty and the family. It begins playful and harmless, almost sweet, before twisting into something grotesque. The spelling game becomes darker and more frantic, and by the time the deformed infant appears, the scene feels both surreal and inevitable. The horror does not feel random. It feels like Derry recognizing one of its own.

IT Welcome to Derry Review: Collage of the chaotic and bloody scene inside the cinema with Lily, Susie, and Phil
IT Welcome to Derry Review: The horror escalates quietly, then suddenly — like childhood turning into something unrecognizable.

The bathroom scene with Lily and the drain felt like a quiet acknowledgment of IT lore without leaning on nostalgia as a crutch. The singing voice, the slow build, the finger pushing up through the drain. That moment reminded me of the original story, but with enough difference to feel new. The familiarity makes the audience tense before anything actually happens.

Across both episodes, the horror feels deeply personal. The fear grows from buried trauma, family wounds and unspoken memories. Veronica’s unraveling home life, Lily’s grief and the brutal disappearance of their friends are not just isolated events. They seem connected, as if something in Derry is studying them. Not attacking, but testing. Almost like it is waiting for them to break.

There is a sense that whatever is waking up has been here far longer than the characters realize. The children are not just unlucky. They are chosen. And the most terrifying part is that they do not know why.

IT Welcome to Derry Review: Collage of the kids at school including Lily, Marge, Veronica, Will, and Rich
IT Welcome to Derry Review: These characters aren’t just scared. They’re shaped by the history no one wants to say aloud.

Characters Carved Out of Memory and Fear

Two episodes in and I am already invested in the characters more than I expected. Lily and Veronica’s fractured friendship feels important. The guilt. The anger. The shared trauma. They aren’t just dealing with supernatural horror. They are dealing with the grief of being children in a world that doesn’t believe them until it is too late.

And then there is Leroy. The mystery around the military experiments and what exactly they unearthed feels like a thread that could either unravel everything or ground the supernatural horror in something even more sinister. Because if fear is being studied, harvested or weaponized then Pennywise isn’t the beginning. He’s the result.

IT Welcome to Derry Review: Collage of Lily in the supermarket, pickle jars with her father’s head, and missing kids printed on cereal boxes
IT Welcome to Derry Review: Nostalgia feels warm until familiar places turn uncanny.

The Mood: Equal Parts Nostalgia and Unease

There is also a strange playfulness woven into the horror. A grotesque imagination that borders on absurdity while still feeling threatening.

That tone feels intentional. This story knows it is playing with legacy. It knows the audience remembers the old IT. The miniseries. The remakes. The trauma. The floating balloons. The red that stains memory.

Welcome to Derry isn’t relying on jump scares or cheap shock. The horror so far is:

  • Atmospheric
  • Visual
  • Psychological

and most of all uncomfortable. Right now this feels less like a clown story and more like a history of terror. Pennywise is coming but the town is already sick.

IT Welcome to Derry Review: Still image of Marge and classmates watching Veronica and Lily argue outside the school
IT Welcome to Derry Review: Not all stories need a clown to be terrifying — sometimes the real horror is the fracture between friends.

Final Thoughts So Far

My Welcome to Derry Review at this early stage is simple.
I’m intrigued.
I’m unsettled.
I’m not sure where this is going but I want to follow it.

It feels respectful to the source material but bold enough to do something new. There is enough horror to satisfy long time fans and enough mystery to pull new ones in.

If the next episodes continue to build the tension and finally unleash Pennywise in a way that feels earned, this could become something memorable.

Until then, I’ll watch with the same mix of dread and excitement I had as a kid hearing about IT second hand through my aunt’s whispered stories and warnings.

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