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'It: Welcome to Derry' Review: HBO's Warmed-Over 'It' Prequel
TV & Streaming

‘It: Welcome to Derry’ Review: HBO’s Warmed-Over ‘It’ Prequel

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

If you appreciate a good understatement, Kimberly Guerrero’s Rose utters a real doozy partway through the fourth episode of HBO’s It: Welcome to Derry.

Rose, local small businesswoman and member of the Indigenous tribe protecting secrets about the titular Maine town, explains to newcomer Charlotte Hanlon (Taylour Paige), “Derry is a beautiful place, but things do happen from time to time. Never a bad idea to keep the people you love close.”

It: Welcome to Derry

The Bottom Line

Pennywise but pound foolish.

Airdate: 9 p.m. Sunday, October 26 (HBO)
Cast: Jovan Adepo, Taylour Paige, Chris Chalk, James Remar, Stephen Rider, Madeleine Stowe, Rudy Mancuso and Bill Skarsgård
Creators: Andy Muschietti, Barbara Muschietti and Jason Fuchs

That’s about as close as any Derry resident can get to saying, “Come for our open-minded New England values, stay because you were butchered by a killer clown.” Forgetting Derry’s communal traumas is as much a part of the town’s firmament as the scenic canals, the nearby Air Force base where Charlotte’s hubby Leroy (Jovan Adepo) has been newly posted, and the dilapidated house at 29 Neibolt Street. This forgetfulness, which has a supernatural origin, abets the monstrous tragedies that befall Derry every 27 years and it fuels It: Welcome to Derry, a bluntly effective frightfest that too often gets its scares through repetitiveness rather than creativity.

Developed by Andy Muschietti, Barbara Muschietti and Jason Fuchs, It: Welcome to Derry is a companion series/prequel to Muschietti’s two-part film adaptation, which translated Stephen King‘s epic novel by removing all of its structural and thematic complexity. Instead of weaving a nuanced interlocking story built on nostalgia and memory, Muschietti delivered a decent period-set childhood romp that wasn’t bad, and then an autonomous present-day sequel saddled with nearly all the book’s narrative flaws, somehow made even worse.

The book, probably still my pick as King’s scariest novel if not his best, is overpacked with additional flashbacks and interludes that could have been fodder for multiple seasons of television. What’s most peculiar about It: Welcomes to Derry, then, is that the creators have opted to basically replicate the core plot of the movie/book and fill in the gaps with what feel like third-tier King devices and clichés.

I sometimes liked It: Welcome to Derry, but mostly because it reminded me of a thing I love, not because of much that it actually does.

The body of the series begins in April of 1962, four months after one of those “things” that happen in Derry from time to time. The “thing” is shown in a deliciously gory prologue that relies heavily on the film version of The Music Man, a movie released in June 1962, one of many things about the timeline that you don’t want to think too hard about. Suffice it to say, without spoiling, that children aren’t safe in Derry.

It’s a less-than-ideal place, then, for Charlotte and Leroy, a Korean War hero (another temporal detail that doesn’t entirely work) with a unique condition, to bring their son Will (Blake Cameron James). Leroy soon meets the base’s commanding officer, General Shaw (James Remar), and fellow airman Dick Hallorann (Chris Chalk), who has his own unique condition that’s already well known to fans of The Shining. A Black family’s move into a traditionally white space made for an effective set-up in the intriguing, if slightly heavy-handed Amazon horror anthology Them, but here the racial undertones are limited to some tossed-off dialogue, playing second fiddle to what’s happening on the base and in surrounding environs.

The main story is a straight-up rehash of the Losers Club from the book, the juvenile adventures that so thoroughly inspired Stranger Things. Mike gets to Derry High School and soon meets an assortment of outcasts, including Lilly (Clara Stack), who spent time at the Juniper Hill Asylum after the untimely death of her father; Ronnie (Amanda Christine), whose father is the projectionist at the local movie theater; Lilly’s bestie Margie (Matilda Lawler), desperate to be popular and prone to saying things like “ginchy.” 

Awful things are transpiring in Derry and some of the outcasts soon begin poking around and, because kids have open imaginations, they’re relatively chill when voices start coming out of the sewers and fingers start poking up from the bathroom drains.

“It sounds impossible, but maybe it’s just improbable,” observes Teddy (Mikkal Karim Fidler), another outcast with a very familiar last name.

Get ready for ill-fated kids, eerily floating red balloons and a familiar clown named Pennywise. (Though Bill Skarsgard is prominent in the cast and even a credited executive producer, Pennywise doesn’t play a huge role in the five episodes sent to critics.)

But mostly, get ready for references and Easter eggs aplenty. It takes little Stephen King literacy to know that a character named “Hanlon” will someday be connected to Mike or to understand what it means to have Dick Hallorann as part of the story, and even less to point knowingly at a prison bus labeled “Shawshank.” If you’re the sort of Stephen King fan who sees the name “Bowers” — the local police chief — and instantly thinks “Henry” or hears a mention of Juniper Hill and is reminded of a half-dozen novels and stories, you’re on the series’ general wavelength.

(Except if you’re able to make those mid-grade Stephen King leaps, you’re probably the sort of fan who’s frustrated that the Muschietti timeline has to be treated as “definitive,” and for whom the original Losers Club storyline will always take place in 1957-58 and not 1988-1989 like in the film. That makes it even more confusing and, honestly, annoying that Welcome to Derry reboots the Losers Club story here in 1962. Will Hanlon having gone through a near-identical adventure to the one his son goes through 27 years later fits with King’s symmetry, but if you prefer the timeline from the books, the son’s adventure actually comes five years before the father’s adventure and everything becomes a mess.)

Say what you will about the payoffs delivered by Hulu’s Castle Rock — I thought both seasons set things up intriguingly, but couldn’t match their early aspirations — but that attempt to build an original series around a fictionalized Maine town honored the obsession of Stephen King fans and tried to carve new pathways through his work. I found myself frequently scratching my head about why the Welcome to Derry creators thought the only way to approach this story anew was to do the same thing over again, or to pipe in a folkloric Indigenous backdrop that deserved to be treated with far more commitment and authenticity.

The book is about primal insecurities and relatable fears, explored through the lens of classic horror tropes. The series says it’s about those things, but the lip-service references to the Civil Rights Movement and the Cold War fail to approach the depth necessary to push past frightening-in-a-somewhat-silly-way to actually terrifying.

If you can ignore the familiarity, it’s easy to enjoy the Losers Club story, which has at least been extremely well-cast. James has an earnest charm, Christine a solid fierceness and Fidler a relatable fragility. Lawler, the best known of the young actors thanks to her breakout work in Station Eleven, brings welcome awkward humor, while Stack, with the series’ most complex character, conveys an uneasy grasp on sanity that the rest of the show isn’t really prepared to deal with.

From the adult cast, only Chalk, haunted in a way that’s instantly recognizable if you know the character’s origins and destination in the King-verse, has the gravity necessary to make up for how anemic the military story is. 

I can’t quite tell you, for reasons of both uncertainty and secrecy, what Madeleine Stowe is doing here, but even in a small role it’s a pleasure to see this underutilized actress. Paige, Adepo and Remar are among the actors whom I’ve liked in other things, but are so far squandered here.

Muschietti and the series’ subsequent directors may not develop any set pieces of substantive or psychologically rich horror, but there are stretches that are gross or fun or grossly fun — including the opening scene with the Music Man backdrop, a memorably grotesque and paranoid trip to the supermarket and one sequence best avoided by anybody with a phobia related to eyes. A playfully Amblin-esque scene involving bicycles in a cemetery offers an adrenaline rush, even if the effects reminded me of the Haunted Mansion Disney theme park attraction.

It’s telling that my favorite part of It: Welcome to Derry is the opening credit sequence, set against the childishly unsettling chestnut “A Smile and a Ribbon.” A series of Rockwell-esque, deceptively chipper images of small-town perfection are interrupted by subterranean nightmares. The credit sequence points to a satirical exploration of America’s transition from the assimilationist 1950s into the tumult of the 1960s, a piece of the book that the films lost in the fumbled timelines and that the series isn’t, thus far, clever enough to handle.

The message basically seems to be “Derry is a beautiful place, but things do happen from time to time.” You’ve probably heard that wisdom before, just like you’ve seen nearly everything in It: Welcome to Derry before.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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The Wait Is Over! Bradley Cooper Joins Margot Robbie In 'Ocean's Eleven' Prequel | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

The Wait Is Over! Bradley Cooper Joins Margot Robbie In ‘Ocean’s Eleven’ Prequel | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Hollywood heavyweight Bradley Cooper is reportedly in negotiations to star opposite Margot Robbie in the upcoming Ocean’s Eleven prequel, a fresh chapter in the beloved heist franchise that began with Steven Soderbergh’s 2001 blockbuster.

The new film will serve as a prelude to the events of the original Ocean’s Eleven, which featured an all-star ensemble cast including George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, and Julia Roberts. Known for its slick style, sharp wit, and high-stakes plotting, the 2001 film followed a crew of skilled con artists as they attempted to rob three Las Vegas casinos in one night.

The prequel is expected to shift the timeline and setting, taking viewers back in time — possibly to 1960s Europe — and exploring the origins of the Ocean family’s criminal legacy. Margot Robbie, who is also producing the project through her LuckyChap banner, has been attached to the film since early development. Bradley Cooper, if confirmed, would likely take on a co-lead role, possibly tied to the family of Danny or Debbie Ocean.

Directed by Lee Isaac Chung (Minari, Twisters), with a script by Carrie Solomon, the film aims to reimagine the charm and cleverness of the franchise with a vintage twist. While plot details remain under wraps, the project is said to blend the glamour of the era with the tension of a classic heist.

The Ocean’s franchise has long been a staple of stylish crime cinema, and the addition of two of today’s biggest stars — Robbie and Cooper — suggests the prequel is being positioned as both a nostalgic nod and a reinvention for a new generation of fans.

Production timelines and release dates are yet to be announced.

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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Kantara Chapter 1 review: Folk goes mass as Rishab Shetty, Rukmini Vasanth excel in uneven but visually splendid prequel
Bollywood

Kantara Chapter 1 review: Folk goes mass as Rishab Shetty, Rukmini Vasanth excel in uneven but visually splendid prequel

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Kantara Chapter 1 review

Cast: Rishab Shetty, Rukmini Vasanth, Jayaram, Gulshan Devaiah

Director: Rishab Shetty

Rating: ★★★

Halfway into Kantara: Chapter 1, I could not help but feel that the film, like the original Kantara, was an elaborate setup for a visually splendid payoff. The film tests your patience, exhausts you, and frustrates you before eventually rewarding you with what is one of the most visually stunning climaxes in recent times. Yet, while the original Kantara held it all together, Chapter 1 seems to be nudging the viewer to just wait for that payoff and ignore the bumpy ride along the way. Does it take the sheen away a bit? Certainly. Is Kantara Chapter 1 still a watchable film? Immensely so! Despite the unevenness and drab moments, Rishab Shetty yet again scripts a theatrical spectacle that can only be experienced, not explained.

Kantara Chapter 1 review: Rishab Shetty takes on the daunting task of following up to Kantara.

What is it about

Kantara: Chapter 1 is an origin story that explains the backstory of the daivas and the guliga we saw in Kantara. Rishab plays Berme, a warrior from Kantara, a hamlet that is at odds with the neighbouring Kadamba kingdom. The ruler Vijayendra (Jayaram) has enforced an uneasy truce with Kantara, but his ambitious and wayward son, Kulasekhara (Gulshan Devaiah), wants to annex Kantara and capture the resources in the forest. Even as the princess Kanakvathi (Rukmini Vasanth) tries to find a middle ground, blood spills, and Kulasekhara and Berme come face to face.

What works and what doesn’t

While the 2022 film Kantara was a rooted film about traditions and folk tales of coastal Karnataka, Kantara: Chapter 1 is an ambitious, large-scale story of greed, war, and destiny. It is magnified several-fold as compared to the first part. The prequel is more mass than folk, giving both the heroes and the villains enough time to saunter on the screen and indulge in some elevation. If Kantara had some nuance, Chapter 1 has the subtlety of a sledgehammer. It is loud, bold, and in-your-face, perhaps a little too much at times.

What makes Kantara Chapter 1 a little intolerable at times is how uneven and scattered the narrative gets, particularly in the first half. It moves at a leisurely pace, flitting between the two settings and often indulging a bit too much in the characters’ frivolities. The humour seems forced, and the romance a little rushed. Yet, the moment the action kicks in, the film gets back on track.

Movie Review

Kantara: Chapter 1

Kantara: Chapter 1

Rating Star 3/5

Tracing the origins of the daivas and guliga in Kantara, the Rishab Shetty film focusses on the standoff between the village and a neighbouring kingdom centuries ago.

Cast

Rishab Shetty, Rukmini Vasanth, Jayaram, Gulshan Devaiah

Verdict

Kantara Chapter 1 relies upon its visuals, cinematography, and splendid scale to patch over the roughness in the narrative. Rishab Shetty and Rukmini Vasanth’s performances help too.

Rishab Shetty balances the folk traditions that have inspired the film with modern sensibilities better this time around. Chapter 1 gives its women more agency than the first film ever did. But even this one can’t resist the knight-in-shining-armour trope. However strong the woman is, a man must rescue her in the end. Rishab Shetty’s writing seems to allow women to have power and independence only when they rebel or antagonise. Otherwise, it is reduced to tokenism. However, still props to the writer-director for giving a female character more prominence this time around, and even giving her some of the most powerful moments in the film.

But the real clincher for the film is the visuals. The VFX work is quite splendid for a film of this budget. The CGI tiger and monkeys, in particular, have been rendered beautifully. But it’s the film’s play with fire and the depiction of the guliga and daivas that steal the show. The powerful climax is elevated by Rishab Shetty’s performance, but the VFX plays an important role there. What is also noteworthy is the cinematography. Much of the film is shot at night, but Kantara: Chapter 1 thankfully discards the newfound penchant for too much darkness on screen.

The performances

I expected Rishab to shine again on screen, and he does. In scenes where he transforms into the guliga, he is a man possessed and delivers a breathtaking, captivating performance yet again. But for me, the other star was Rukmini Vasanth. The second half of the film allows her to take on a central role in the narrative, showing shades that films in this genre seldom allow female stars to. And the actor excels. Gulshan Devaiah has been wasted in the first half, but he briefly gets to show his true mettle after the interval.

Rukmini Vasanth in a still from Kantara: Chapter 1.
Rukmini Vasanth in a still from Kantara: Chapter 1.

Chapter 1 a critique of consumerism as it is a commentary on greed and maintaining the ecological balance, all themes that were present in the first Kantara too. Here, they have been presented with a medieval lens, though. And Rishab Shetty does well as these are the only moments in the film that have some nuance and subtlety. But the visuals and performances, coupled with the splendid presentation of folkore, is enough to patch the holes left by the roughness in the narrative. This makes Kantara: Chapter 1 one of the most visually stunning and watchable Indian films in recent times.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Jackie Chung and Rachel Blanchard in 'The Summer I Turned Pretty' season 1.
TV & Streaming

‘The Summer I Turned Pretty’ Moms on Season 3 Finale, Possible Prequel

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains major spoilers from the series finale of The Summer I Turned Pretty, titled “At Last.”]

Amid Belly (Lola Tung), Conrad (Christopher Briney) and Jeremiah’s (Gavin Casalegno) love triangle drama throughout Prime Video‘s The Summer I Turned Pretty, Rachel Blanchard believes Susannah “didn’t mean to cause this kind of chaos.”

Before Conrad and Jeremiah’s mom, Susannah, died of cancer between seasons one and two, she was always secretly hoping Belly, the daughter of her best friend Laurel (Jack Chung), would end up with one of her sons. But what she didn’t know was the pressure it was actually putting on Belly, as revealed in the season three finale before Conrad and Belly ultimately end up together.

“She probably saw something in both of them, and I think it was a bit of fantasy for her. But if she knew the chaos that would ensue and the hurt, she would have said it differently, I think,” Blanchard says.

Despite all the messiness after her death — from Laurel and Belly fights, and Conrad withholding his true feelings for Belly, to Jeremiah and Belly becoming codependent on each other in their relationship and rushing to get married — they all matured throughout the final season and eventually, all found clarity as individuals and with love.

Below, Chung and Blanchard unpack the drama-filled third and final season, their thoughts on the show’s ending, if Laurel would actually be open to going on a single’s cruise and their thoughts on a potential prequel with their characters.

***

How does it feel to see the series come to an end after spending so many years with your characters?

JACKIE CHUNG I feel very lucky that we’re able to be here in Paris and watch it together, not only with an audience, but with each other. Because I think when I spoke to you [previously], people would ask me, “How did you feel?” I ould say it doesn’t feel over. I’m still seeing everyone. I haven’t seen all the episodes. I still have to experience those, and now this feels like a finale; it feels more complete. 

RACHEL BLANCHARD A really special finale. I’ve never had a screening for the last episode of anything, let alone in Paris and being together with everyone, so it feels really special. 

Jackie, why do you think Conrad was able to convince Laurel to come to the wedding, but she instantly shut Jeremiah down when he came earlier to ask her with Belly?

CHUNG Part of it was because I think they do have a close relationship and she really does value his thoughts and opinions, because they think similarly. He’s not impulsive, he’s very thoughtful and measured as she is, but I also think when Jeremiah and Belly came to her, it was still so fresh. Belly was still in the house. By the time she talked to Conrad, as she mentions in the scene, everybody else has turned. John was a quick one and Steven was also a quick one (laughs). I think she was feeling the loss of Belly in her home and in her life, and more time had passed. I think she was hopeful she would come around, and she didn’t. So I think he came at an important moment and was able to just push her further to the other side. 

Jackie Chung in The Summer I Turned Pretty season three.

Prime Video

Rachel, knowing Susannah knew the way Conrad felt about Belly, what do you think she would have thought about Belly and Jeremiah’s relationship?

BLANCHARD I think she would have thought they were too young to get married. But I think Susannah would have been supportive of whatever her kids and Belly wanted to explore. I don’t think she was set on Conrad at all costs. 

There’s no doubt Susannah would have hated seeing Conrad and Jeremiah fight, so what do you think she would have thought of their confrontation, which turned into a resolution, at her grave in season three?

BLANCHARD I think she would have been so disappointed. She didn’t mean to cause this kind of chaos and fracture in their relationship. All I think she ever wanted was everyone to look out for each other, and maybe her message got a bit misconstrued and taken a bit too seriously. 

Jackie, why do you think Laurel hasn’t gone to visit Belly in Paris? Especially since she stayed longer than Laurel was expecting, and it’s clear she misses her daughter.

CHUNG I imagine they’ve spoken. They’re close enough that Belly’s probably given her updates. If it were up to me, I would have been there (laughs). But in terms of the story, Belly needed this time to discover who she is and to explore this Parisian version of herself, and really come into her own. I think it was important for her to be on her own without her mom voicing some opinions in her ear. 

Lola Tung in season three.

Prime Video

I have to ask your thoughts, Jackie, on fans saying Belly got a Laurel bob in the finale?

CHUNG I did not hear that (laughs). No way! She looked so cute, but she could have any haircut and look so cute. She’s so beautiful. Laurel would be like, “Twinsies!” And then Belly would be like, “Ugh. I’m going to change it.” 

Rachel, since Susannah has only been seen in flashbacks since season one, was it hard playing this character that is essentially still the glue that brings everyone together, but now as a memory?

BLANCHARD I knew it was going to be like that because it’s based on the books. But it wasn’t hard. It was just really fun. For a while I was just doing dying scenes and those got sad and are pretty heavy. So even though I really enjoyed doing it, they were interesting scenes to do. I also really loved doing the scene at the bar [in season one.]  

Do you think it was wrong for Susannah to push for Belly to be with one of her sons? Especially since viewers learn in the finale that this has been an internal fear for Belly.

BLANCHARD I don’t know if Susannah knew they were interpreting it as pressure. If she had known that, she would have maybe expressed it differently. She probably saw something in both of them, and I think it was a bit of fantasy for her. But if she knew the chaos that would ensue and the hurt, she would have said it differently, I think. But I also think she’d be happy they ended up together, but only if they both really wanted it. She didn’t want it at all costs. 

Gavin Casalegno, Lola Tung and Christopher Briney in season three.

Prime Video

In episode 10, fans started to panic when Belly’s dad, John, had some heartburn, leading them to theorize that he may have a heart attack in the series finale as a reason for Belly to come home. Did you all see those theories, and if so, what did you make of them?

CHUNG We did see and hear about those. It never crossed my mind at all. I think it’s so amazing that fans are so invested and also that they want to know so badly what’s gonna happen in the story that they’re just so open to creating theories, but that was a very unexpected one. 

In the finale, it seems like Laurel is on good terms with John and Adam. Since she’s now an empty nester, what do you see next for Laurel? Maybe she’ll actually go on that singles cruise Adam suggested?

CHUNG I don’t know if Laura would go on that singles cruise (Laughs), but I think she is open to exploring different relationships and building probably new friendships, not just romantic relationships, and hopefully more professional goals for herself. She has so much room to grow even at this age and stage of her life. And the three of them, they’ve been in a family already for decades, so they will always be family. They do fight and bicker and they know the annoying things that each of the other one does, but there is always going to be a closeness between the three, and I think they can have a good time together sometimes. 

Maybe the Summer I Turned Pretty movie should just follow them on this singles cruise.

CHUNG I actually would love to see a movie of the singles cruise. 

BLANCHARD Yes! That would be really funny. 

With this newly announced movie to wrap up the story, what do you know about that so far?

BLANCHARD I don’t know anything about it, but we’re excited about it.  

CHUNG Yeah, we just know that it’s happening, but we don’t know any other details. 

Did you know about the movie going into filming for season three?

BLANCHARD I’d heard rumors, but you can never put stock in rumors because there are so many all the time. So yesterday was the first time that I officially heard. 

CHUNG Yeah, that it was happening for sure.

Do you think fans can expect to see Belly reunited with Laurel and her family since we didn’t get that in the season three finale?

CHUNG I would love to see Belly reunited with her family. I know we saw Laurel and Jeremiah make up and connect, but I’d love to see more of them too. I feel like everyone thinks Laurel skews more Conrad, but she really does feel close to both of them. 

BLANCHARD And I’m so curious to see what happens in the wake of everything, but then it would also be fun to see, like in season one when we were all together in flashbacks, what brought them to where they are, but some of the fun stuff.  

CHUNG A full family dynamic would be lovely to see. 

Lola Tung.

Eddy Chen/Amazon Content Services

Jackie, with Laurel knowing everything Belly has gone through with love, what do you think her reaction was to learning she and Conrad got back together?

CHUNG She would be half surprised and half knowing. But still holding firm to her belief that Belly should take her time. She should see if this is indeed the right relationship. She should pursue her studies and her career, and then see how it plays out. 

What are your thoughts on a prequel series with your characters that I know fans have suggested? And who would you want to play your younger selves?

BLANCHARD I think it would be really fun to see when they first met, so I’d love to see a prequel. I thought Maddie Ziegler and then someone also mentioned Elle Fanning. 

CHUNG And I recently saw Maybe Happy Ending, so I was thinking maybe Helen J. Shen from that [Broadway] show. I think she’s pretty brilliant. 

What would you hope to see explored with your younger characters in a potential prequel?

CHUNG I think it’d be interesting to see how Laurel decided to become a writer. Obviously, how she met everyone in her life, all these important relationships. There’s mention of John and the basement wedding (Laughs). I would love to see that. 

BLANCHARD I’d love to see where [Susannah] was with her art and the decision to let that go for a little while, and really the beginning of our friendship. 

CHUNG That and the styles. I’d like to see the wardrobe. 

***

The Summer I Turned Pretty is now streaming all three seasons on Prime Video. Read THR’s coverage here.

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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Is Hollow Knight: Silksong a sequel or prequel?
TV & Streaming

Is Hollow Knight: Silksong a sequel or prequel?

by jummy84 September 1, 2025
written by jummy84

We all know the name like the back of our hands by now, but is Hollow Knight: Silksong a sequel or a prequel?

The long-awaited follow-up to Team Cherry’s hit 2017 metroidvania is out this month. If you’re wondering whether you need to play Hollow Knight first, it might be helpful to know which game comes first in their shared world’s chronology.

So, is Silksong a sequel? Is Silksong a prequel? Let’s get into it!

Is Hollow Knight: Silksong a sequel or prequel?

According to Team Cherry developers, Hollow Knight: Silksong is a sequel that takes place after the events of Hollow Knight.

While there has been quite a lot of speculation about this, information has been surprisingly scant online. The answer actually comes from a since-deleted blog post from Team Cherry.

In fact, the blog post was the very one in which the team first revealed Silksong to the public. It stated: “Hollow Knight: Silksong is the second game by Team Cherry (that’s us!) and the full-scale sequel to Hollow Knight.”

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It goes on to confirm that Silksong originally started life as a DLC, but “it quickly became too large and too unique to stay as a DLC”, prompting the decision to turn it into its own standalone game.

Incidentally, this is one of the many reasons why Silksong took so long to make.

So, there you have it, straight from the horse’s mouth. While we know that Silksong is a sequel to Hollow Knight, what we don’t know is how directly the two will be linked.

Whether Silksong directly picks up where Hollow Knight left off or chooses to tell a separate story, building upon the events of the first game remains to be seen.

We’ll just have to wait and see what Team Cherry has planned when the game finally launches this week.

Check out more of our Gaming coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

September 1, 2025 0 comments
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