San Diego Comic-Con played host to a fresh wave of unease this weekend as HBO pulled back the curtain on the second teaser for “IT: Welcome to Derry”. The upcoming prequel whisks viewers away into 1962 — decades before the Losers’ Club — tracing the first ripples of fear that would grow into Pennywise’s reign of terror. It’s a tense, slow-burn glimpse at the series’ October debut, and from the looks of it, Derry’s darkest days are only just beginning.
The teaser opens with a deceptive calm as a young couple, played by Taylour Paige and Jovan Adepo, arrive in the quiet-seeming town of Derry, Maine. From the outset, their reception is anything but warm — strangers watch too closely, smiles feel brittle, and half-formed warnings hang in the air.
An unspoken tension runs beneath every interaction, broken only by the sudden silences when they pass. That unease deepens when children begin to disappear, reviving a grim pattern the town knows too well but refuses to acknowledge. As fear takes hold, dread seeps into Derry’s streets, darkening its picture-perfect surface.
Bill Skarsgård slips back into Pennywise’s skin, but the teaser saves his full reveal for its final, jolting seconds — a deliberate restraint that makes his absence feel even more suffocating. His presence lurks instead in the details: a flicker in the streetlights, the claustrophobic press of a narrow alley, and the sudden hush of a too-quiet street. It’s in these moments that Welcome to Derry reminds viewers that sometimes the most terrifying monsters are the ones you can’t yet see.
Developed for television by “IT” and “IT: Chapter Two” filmmaker Andy Muschietti, alongside Barbara Muschietti and Jason Fuchs, the series expands on Stephen King’s original 1986 novel, exploring the cyclical nature of the evil embedded in Derry. The cast also includes Chris Chalk, James Remar, Stephen Rider, Madeleine Stowe, and Rudy Mancuso.
Muschietti, who directs multiple episodes, steers the prequel into darker, more psychological territory — trading jump scares for a creeping sense of inevitability. From the brief look offered, Welcome to Derry appears poised to balance the franchise’s signature terror with a richer exploration of the town’s haunted past. It leans into sustained dread over spectacle, positioning itself as both an origin story and a portrait of a community already under an invisible siege.
IT: Welcome to Derry premieres in October on HBO, with streaming available on Max. For fans of King’s source material and Muschietti’s billion-dollar box-office adaptations, the countdown to Pennywise’s return has officially begun — even if he hasn’t yet shown his full grin.
Derry’s streets may be still — but not for long. What’s your take on Pennywise’s haunting return? Join the conversation on X @celebmix and head to Celebmix for more stories and deep dives into the world of pop culture.