Monster Clown: Difference between revisions

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** In the TV miniseries based on the same, [[Tim Curry]]'s portrayal of the role was so creepy, the other actors avoided him even off-camera. He is responsible for a hell of a lot of people's coulrophobia.
** Pennywise isn't confined simply to "IT"; he appears in several other Stephen King novels, and plays no direct role. He simply sits in the background, possibly waiting for something. Perhaps the most disturbing is in ''Dreamcatcher,'' where it's mentioned that the monument erected honoring the Losers Club for defeating "It" is defaced by graffiti saying "Pennywise lives."
** The ironic part is that[[Irony|Ironically]], while It often used its shape-shifting ability to take the form of nightmarish imagery, one of its primary uses for the Pennywise form was to ''attract'' kids. InsteadAs such, It gives usadults a new reason to fear clowns: [[Adult Fear|they lure children in with balloons and dancing, andonly to then feeddo themunthinkable things to the circus lionsthem...]]
* The Ankh-Morpork Fool's Guild in the ''[[Discworld]]'' series realizes that clowns scare and disgust some people. Thus, they prepare their charges through exceedingly harsh conditions to endure a lot of abuse. [[Terry Pratchett]], creator of the series, has described the guild as "the stricter sort of medieval monastery without [the monastery's] non-stop boffo laughs." He also introduces the idea that whiteface clowns are scary even to other clowns because their humor often comes from bullying others. Doctor Whiteface is described as having, under his painted grin, features "cold and proud as a prince of Hell".
** In ''[[Discworld/Making Money|Making Money]]'', Lord Vetinari proposes that some people hate clowns because clowns aren't really funny, but instead tragic: