Both creatures feed on the emotions of their victims - the former through fear and the latter through laughter. Similarly, Pennywise and Dandelo - a villain from The Dark Tower series also known as Joe Collins - share the same sort of power, and many readers actually thought they were the same character. Walter is actually a servant of The Crimson King in the books, with the ability to shape-shift too, and in the film he has the same goals as his master. The Man in Black (played by Matthew McConaughey), who is the main villain in The Dark Tower. The Crimson King is also linked to Walter, A.K.A. The house on Niebold Street visited by members of the Losers' Club in IT shares a similar description to the wallpaper found in the Dutch Hill mansion, and the Asimov robot, Stuttering Bill, encountered by Susannah and Roland in one of The Dark Tower books, shares the same nickname as Bill Denbrough, the older brother Pennywise's unfortunate victim Georgie Denbrough. He isn’t from the same parallel world as the one depicted in IT, as the Derry, Maine "Mainstream Universe" is a separate one to his Keystone Earth world, however, there are still similarities between the two. Imperium may well have had a theme park and a Pennywise attraction itself, which was inevitably destroyed after these ancient people’s civil war left Mid-World a radioactive mess, and that’s why Jake stumbles across it in the movie. This world was a parallel to the United States and occupied by a people called “Old Ones” who wore similar clothing, drove similar cars and designed architecture similar to that seen in the parallel Earth worlds of It's Derry and Jake's New York. The new world he enters is a barren wasteland with only tattered remnants of the former technologically advanced civilization, known as Imperium, left behind.
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