Videos by ComicBook.com
However, in the finale episode of IT: Welcome to Derry, the series takes its already ambitious premise up several notches. Instead of just a prequel story about what happened when Pennywise last woke up (before the events of the IT movies), Welcome to Derry made a stunning reveal that sets the show up for Seasons 2 and 3 (which have not yet been greenlit, as of writing this). Those new seasons would be set in different time periods (respectively) than Season 1, but would still be connected to the larger story of the IT movies.
SPOILERS FOLLOW!
IT: Welcome to Derry Reveals Pennywise’s Omni Awareness Power

In Welcome to Derry Episode 8, “Winter Fire”, Pennywise makes a large-scale attack on Derry through an ominous fog that rolls over the town. Many children are abducted, and the young “losers” race to rescue their friend Will Hanlon, just as Will’s father Leroy (Jovan Adepo), mother Charlotte (Taylour Paige), Dick Halloraan (Chris Chalk), and Native leader Rose (Kimberly Guerrero) lead their own squad to intercept the kids, and use their mystical dagger to seal Pennywise away. The race ends at a deadwood tree that marks the opening of Pennywise’s “cage”; at one point, the villain snatches young Marge Truman (Matilda Lawler) for a little chat and makes a shocking revelation.
Pennywise tells Marge that he’s been after her and her “loser” friends for a reason: Marge, in particular, will one day have a son named Richie, who makes a group of friends that stand up to Pennywise and finally cause his demise. According to the demonic entity, the past, present, and future are all one shared circle for him, and the losers “killing” him are also connected to the moment of his birth. Marge, Will, and co. manage to seal the cage and banish Pennywise for his 27-year slumber. However, after the battle, Marge talks with Lily Bainbridge (Clara Stack) about Pennywise’s ramblings: both girls realise that the entity can theoretically strike again, before they were ever born, to change the events that eventually doom it. And there’s nothing they can do about it.
Can Pennywise Really Time Travel?

There are numerous sci-fi films and TV shows that deal with the idea of time as a circle rather than a linear path as we perceive it. The perception of past, present, and future all at once isn’t technically defined as “time travel”; rather, it is an omni awareness that allows someone (or something) to affect their decision-making in the moment, based on knowledge of what will be. That device was used to powerful effect in Denis Villeneuve’s Arrival (2016), which played with past, present and future to tell its story about choice vs. destiny.
That is the portrait of Pennywise’s awareness and perception of time that Welcome to Derry has painted. The mystery of how Pennywise’s “death” is also his “birth” is a dangling thread for later seasons to answer (and is also a clear road to possibly bringing the entity back for a new story set after the events of the original IT novel). But as for the time-hopping for Seasons 2 and 3: It’s clear that Pennywise would essentially be using awareness of future events and his death to attack key figures in the past.









