Monday, March 9, 2015

In for a Penny: Who would make the most spine-chilling Pennywise the killer clown?

True Detective’s Cary Fukunaga seems the perfect choice to direct the first ever big-screen adaptation of Stephen King’s It. The 1990 miniseries benefited from a crackerjack-crazy turn from Tim Curry as Pennywise, the leering, sneering killer clown who haunts a small Maine town. But 25 years later, the production seems melodramatic, and some of the adult performances – not to mention the haircuts – are straight out of a Roger Corman flick.
Fukunaga’s brooding style ought to make for a far scarier movie, and there is talk that this will be a two-part film to mirror the split narrative of King’s epic 1,138-page tome. Furthermore, King himself is reported to have given the screenplay his seal of approval.
So far, so good. But Fukunaga says he is still struggling to find the right actor to play Pennywise, the main manifestation of the shape-shifting supernatural nasty. Here’s a few suggestions to help him out.

Michael Shannon

The Boardwalk Empire actor proved that he can play the powderkeg villain to a tee as Nelson Van Alden AKA George Mueller. He may lack Curry’s clownish grin, but those bulging basilisk eyes are unmatched in modern Hollywood.
Michael Shannon in Boardwalk Empire.
Michael Shannon in Boardwalk Empire. Photograph: HBO/Everett/Rex Features

Tilda Swinton

The current fan favourite would make for some powerful stunt casting, though the Oscar-winning British actor’s androgynous look is very different from Curry’s extravagantly proportioned features. Swinton was the best thing about The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, and really went to town on the camp villain front with her squinting, spitting Minister Mason, a cross between Hilda Ogden and Hitler, in the excellent Snowpiercer. She looks scary in clown makeup, and has been tipped for – and played – high-profile male roles before.
Tilda Swinton as the gender-bending Orlando.
Tilda Swinton as the gender-bending Orlando. Photograph: Liam Longman/Adventure Pictures Ltd

Willem Dafoe

A wide grin and intense, baleful eyes are essential to capturing Pennywise’s demonic malignancy, and Dafoe has the perfect look. His Green Goblin stands second only to Heath Ledger’s Joker in the grand pantheon of big-screen supervillains, and his sleazy, dentally challenged mobster Bobby Peru in David Lynch’s Wild at Heart was downright abhorrent.
Willem Dafoe as Bobby Peru in Wild at Heart.
Willem Dafoe as Bobby Peru in Wild at Heart. Photograph: Landmark Media

Kiefer Sutherland

Nearly three decades after essaying a pretty decent camp cult villain in The Lost Boys, Sutherland would make for an assured Pennywise. He has the ability to deliver the husky New York brogue that Curry pulled off to surprising effect, and his poisonous leer would be straight out of the seventh layer of Hades.
Kiefer Sutherland, second from left, in The Lost Boys.
Kiefer Sutherland, second from left, in The Lost Boys. Photograph: Allstar

Nicolas Cage

Bear with me. Cage may have the furniture-chewing capacity of an army of hungry termites, but when he’s good, he’s very good indeed. And while Fukunaga’s take on Pennywise is likely to be more subtle and layered than the 1990 version, it’s still a pretty one-dimensional role. Whoever takes on the part needs to be capable of adding genuine venom to occasionally shonky dialogue (remember all that stuff about “floating in the deadlights”?) Cage has off-kilter energy in spades, as well as a willingness to push the boundaries of taste at every available opportunity. He could be a car crash in the role, but he might also prove a revelation.
Nicolas Cage in Drive Angry.
Nicolas Cage in Drive Angry. Photograph: Lionsgate/Allstar

Geoffrey Rush

The Aussie Oscar winner certainly has a knack for gurning, sneering villains, with his Captain Hector Barbossa from the Pirates of the Caribbean movies occasionally surpassing even Johnny Depp’s Jack Sparrow for sea-dog pantomime posturing. And it’s a little-known fact that Rush trained under the late, legendary French mime actor and teacher Jacques Lecoq, so the physical side of the role should be well within his sphere of expertise.
Geoffrey Rush, centre, in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End.
Geoffrey Rush, centre, in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End. Photograph: Rex/BuenaVista/Everett