The Thing (film)

The Thing (film)

Infobox Film
name = John Carpenter’s
The Thing


writer = Novella:
John W. Campbell, Jr.
Screenplay:
Bill Lancaster
starring = Kurt Russell
Wilford Brimley
Keith David
David Clennon
Donald Moffat
Thomas G. Waites
Joel Polis
Peter Maloney
Charles Hallahan
T. K. Carter
Richard Dysart
Richard Masur
director = John Carpenter
producer = David Foster
Lawrence Turman (Associate Producer)
distributor = MCA / Universal Pictures
released = June 25, 1982
runtime = 109 min.
language = English
Norwegian
budget = $10,000,000 (estimated) | gross = $13,782,838 (only US)
music = Ennio Morricone
John Carpenter
(Uncredited)
amg_id = 1:49462
imdb_id = 0084787

"The Thing" is a 1982 science fiction and horror film directed by John Carpenter, written by Bill Lancaster and starring Kurt Russell.

Ostensibly a remake of the 1951 Christian Nyby film "The Thing from Another World", Carpenter’s film is a more faithful adaptation of the novella "Who Goes There?" by John W. Campbell, Jr., which inspired the 1951 film.

The film is about a shape-shifting alien that is revived after being frozen in ice. The alien infiltrates a scientific research station in the Antarctic and kills a Norwegian research team. A nearby American research team investigates the incident and is in turn attacked by the alien.

The theatrical performance of the film was poor, opening in 8th place at the box office. [ [http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?page=weekend&id=thing.htm The Thing (1982) - Weekend Box Office Results ] ] Many factors have been attributed to the poor opening, which include the release of "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial", a more optimistic view of alien visitation. However, the film has gone on to gain a following with the release on home video. Carpenter considers the film to be the first part of his Apocalypse Trilogy. The film has been released on DVD in 1998 and 2004. In 2002 a video game was released which followed on from the film's plot.

Plot

In 1982, an American Antarctic research station is alerted by gunfire and explosions. Pursued by a Norwegian helicopter, a Siberian Husky makes its way into the camp as the science station's crew looks on in confusion. Through the reckless use of a thermal charge, the helicopter is destroyed and its pilot killed shortly after landing. The surviving passenger fires at the dog with a rifle, grazing Bennings (Peter Maloney), one of the American researchers. The passenger is subsequently shot and killed by Garry (Donald Moffat), the station commander. Not knowing what to make of the incident, the station crew adopts the dog.

Unable to contact the outside world via radio, helicopter pilot R.J. MacReady (Kurt Russell) and Dr. Copper (Richard Dysart) risk a flight to the Norwegian camp to find it destroyed, its personnel missing or dead. Finding evidence that the Norwegians had dug something out of the ice, the pair return to the station with the partially-burned remains of a hideous creature which bears some human features. An autopsy of the cadaver by Dr. Blair (Wilford Brimley) is inconclusive, save to find that the creature had what appeared to be a normal set of internal organs.

At Bennings' request, the station veterinarian, Clark (Richard Masur), kennels the stray with the rest of the station's sled dogs. Noises from the kennel cause Clark to return, finding almost the entire sled team in the process of being messily assimilated by the stray dog, which has transformed into a monster. MacReady summons the rest of the crew to the kennel with the fire alarm and orders Childs (Keith David) to incinerate the creature with a flamethrower. A subsequent autopsy by Blair reveals that the stray dog was an alien capable of absorbing and perfectly imitating other life-forms. Realizing the implications of this, Blair quickly becomes withdrawn and suspicious of the rest of the crew. A second helicopter expedition discovers an alien spacecraft unearthed by the Norwegian research team, revealing that the creature had awakened after being buried within the permafrost for thousands of years.

Bennings and Windows (Thomas G. Waites) quarantine the burnt remains of both the dog-creature and the Norwegian cadaver in the storage room, but in the process Bennings is left alone. Moments later, Windows discovers Bennings in the process of being assimilated. The crew burns the Bennings replica before its transformation is complete. Determining that all life on Earth would be assimilated in just over three years if the creature were to reach the mainland, Blair goes berserk, destroying the helicopter and radio equipment and killing the remaining sled dogs. The team overpowers him and confines him in the tool shed. With all contact to the outside world cut off, the crew wonders how to determine who is still human. Paranoia quickly sets in as the first attempt to develop a test is sabotaged by an unknown party.

Fuchs (Joel Polis), attempting to continue Blair's research, goes missing shortly afterwards during a power failure. While searching for Fuchs' body, MacReady comes under suspicion and is locked outside in a severe blizzard. Somehow finding his way back to camp without a guide line, MacReady breaks into a camp storage room and threatens the rest of the crew with dynamite. In the course of MacReady's standoff, Norris (Charles Hallahan) suffers a heart attack. When Dr. Copper attempts to revive him, Norris' body transforms and kills Copper. Norris' head detaches from his body, sprouts legs and attempts to escape as the others burn the body, leading MacReady to theorize that every piece of the alien is an individual animal with its own survival instinct. In an altercation that precedes a test proposed by MacReady, Clark tries to stab MacReady, who shoots and kills him. The rest of the crew complies with the test; blood samples are drawn from each member of the team and jabbed with a hot wire to see whose blood will react defensively. Palmer (David Clennon), the backup pilot, is soon unmasked as an imitation, and manages to kill Windows before being lit on fire by MacReady and blown up with a stick of dynamite.

Confirming that MacReady, Childs, Garry, and Nauls (T.K. Carter) are still human, the surviving crew set out to administer the test to Blair, only to find that he has escaped. After discovering that Blair had been constructing a small flying craft of alien design underneath the tool shed and witnessing Childs inexplicably abandon his post at the main gate, the facility loses all power. Realizing that the creature now wants to freeze again so a future rescue team will find it, the remaining crew acknowledge that they will not survive and set about destroying the facility with dynamite and molotov cocktails in hopes of killing the creature. While setting explosives in the underground generator room, Garry is assimilated by Blair. Nauls follows the sounds of a creature and is never seen again. Suddenly alone, MacReady prepares to detonate the charges when the creature, now huge, emerges from beneath the floor. MacReady kills it with a stick of dynamite, which sets off the rest of the charges and destroys the entire facility.

After some time, MacReady is shown wandering alone in the flaming rubble. He encounters Childs, who claims to have seen Blair and gotten lost while chasing him in the snow. With the polar climate closing in around them, they acknowledge the futility of their distrust, sharing a drink as the camp burns. It is never revealed if either of them had been infected or if they survived long enough to be rescued.

Production

The screenplay was written by Bill Lancaster, son of Burt Lancaster in 1981. The film’s musical score was composed by Ennio Morricone, a rare instance of Carpenter not scoring one of his own films. The film was shot in northern British Columbia. The research station in the film was built by the film crew during summer, and the film shot in sub-freezing winter conditions. The only woman in the film is the voice of a chess computer, voiced by Carpenter regular (and then-wife) Adrienne Barbeau.

The film took three months to shoot on six sound stages, with many of the crew and actors working in cold conditions. The final weeks of shooting took place near Stewart, British Columbia, where snow was guaranteed to fall. [http://www.theofficialjohncarpenter.com/pages/themovies/th/thpronotes.html The Thing Production Notes] , John Carpenter Official Website, Accessed 08-06-08.] John Carpenter filmed the Norwegian camp scenes at the end of production. The Norwegian camp was simply the remains of the American outpost after it was destroyed by explosion.

The film is cited as the first installment in Carpenter’s "Apocalypse Trilogy", followed by 1987’s "Prince of Darkness" and 1995’s "In the Mouth of Madness". While the plots and characters of the films are not related, they all feature a potentially apocalyptic scenario. The film is also notable in Carpenter’s career for two reasons—it was his first foray into studio film-making and it was Carpenter’s first film to be made without Debra Hill as co-producer. "The Thing" was the fourth film shot by cinematographer Dean Cundey (following "Halloween", "The Fog" and "Escape from New York") and the third to feature Kurt Russell as the lead actor (Russell would appear in two additional Carpenter films following "The Thing": "Big Trouble in Little China" and "Escape from L.A.").

In the documentary "Terror Takes Shape" offered on the DVD, film editor Todd C. Ramsay states that he made the suggestion to Carpenter to film a "happy" ending for the movie, purely for protective reasons, while they had Russell available. Carpenter agreed and shot a scene in which MacReady has been rescued and administed a blood test, proving that he is still human. Ramsay follows this by saying that "The Thing" had two test screenings, but Carpenter didn't use the sequence in either of them, as the director felt that the film worked better with its nihilistic conclusion.

According to the 1998 DVD release, the "Blair Monster" was to have had a much larger role in the final battle. However, due to the limitations of stop-motion animation, the "Blair Monster" appears for only a few seconds in the film.

Cast

*Kurt Russell as R. J. MacReady. Helicopter pilot.
*A. Wilford Brimley as Dr. Blair, a station biologist.
*Keith David as Childs. The station's mechanic.
*T.K. Carter as Nauls; The station's cook.
*David Clennon as Palmer. The station's backup helicopter pilot and mechanic.
*Richard Dysart as Dr. Copper. The station's physician.
*Charles Hallahan as Vance Norris. The station's geophysicist.
*Peter Maloney as George Bennings. The station's meteorologist.
*Richard Masur as Clark. The station's veterinarian who takes the "thing" dog in when it arrives.
*Donald Moffat as Garry. The station commander.
*Joel Polis as Fuchs; the station's other biologist.
*Thomas G. Waites as Windows; the station's radio operator.

Reception

The film fared poorly at the box office. Carpenter and several writers who have covered him, such as Michelle Le Blanc and Colin Odell, have speculated that this was due to the release of "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial" two weeks later, with its more optimistic scenario of alien visitation. The film's special effects were simultaneously lauded and lambasted for being technically brilliant but visually repulsive. Roger Ebert called the special effects "among the most elaborate, nauseating, and horrifying sights yet achieved by Hollywood’s new generation of visual magicians", and called the film itself "a great barf-bag movie". [ [http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19820101/REVIEWS/201010349/1023 :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews :: The Thing (xhtml) ] ]

In the book "Prince of Darkness," Carpenter remarked that the audience for horror films had shrunk when questioned about the box office failure of "The Thing". In spite of its lackluster box office performance, the film’s reputation improved in the late nineties through home video releases. The film ranked #97 on Rotten Tomatoes’ "Journey Through Sci-Fi (100 Best-Reviewed Sci-Fi Movies)", and a scene from "The Thing" was listed as #48 on Bravo’s "100 Scariest Movie Moments". As of October 2008, it is ranked #171 of the top 250 movies of all time in the Internet Movie Database.

Release

After its cinema run, the film was released on video and laserdisc, and a re-edited version was created for television by TBS and Universal Studios. The edited version was heavily cut to reduce gore, violence and profanity; additionally featuring a narrator during the opening sequence and an alternate ending. In the alternate ending, a "Thing" which has mimicked one of the sled dogs looks back at the burning camp at dawn before continuing on into the Antarctic wilderness. [ [http://www.outpost31.com/movie/techspecs.html Outpost #31 - Movie - Technical Specs ] ] "The Thing" has subsequently been released twice on DVD by Universal in 1998 and 2004. The 1998 edition was a Universal Collector’s Edition, featuring "The Thing: Terror Takes Shape", an extensive 83-minute documentary. It details all aspects of the film and features interviews from many of the people who worked on the film. There are detailed stories from the cast and crew concerning the adapted screenplay, the special effects, the post-production, the critical reception, and more. Other features include deleted scenes, the alternative ending shown in the television version, a theatrical trailer and production notes. Additionally, John Carpenter and Kurt Russell provide commentary throughout the film. The only omission was an anamorphic widescreen transfer which was remedied with the second DVD/HD DVD release in October 2004, which featured identical supplements to the 1998 release, with the exception of the isolated score track from the documentary. The European release of "The Thing" on Blu-Ray is scheduled for the 6th October 2008.

Soundtrack

The original soundtrack, composed by Ennio Morricone, was released by Varese Sarabande in 1991. It was also available as an isolated score track on the 1998 DVD release, but is not present on the 2004 edition. The soundtrack is currently out of print.

:Track listing
# "Humanity" (Part I) - 6:50
# "Shape" - 3:16
# "Contamination" - 1:02
# "Bestiality" - 2:56
# "Solitude" - 5:58
# "Eternity" - 5:35
# "Wait" - 6:22
# "Humanity" (Part II) - 7:15
# "Sterilization" - 5:12
# "Despair" - 4:58

Legacy

Video game

In 2002, "The Thing" was released as a survival horror third-person shooter for PC, Playstation 2, and Xbox, acting as a sequel to the film. At the completion of the game, R.J. MacReady is found alive and helping the main character complete the last mission. The game used elements of paranoia and mistrust intrinsic to the film. Some retailers, such as GameStop, offered a free copy of the 1998 DVD release as an incentive for reserving the game.

Sequels

In 2004, John Carpenter said in an Empire Magazine interview [Empire Magazine, March 2004] that he has a story idea for "The Thing II", which centers around the two surviving characters, MacReady and Childs. However, Carpenter felt that due to the higher price associated with his fee, Universal Studios will not pursue his storyline. Carpenter indicated that he would be able to secure both Kurt Russell and Keith David for the sequel. In his story, Carpenter would explain Kurt Russell's and Keith David's age by having frostbite on their face due to the elements until rescued. The assumption of the sequel would rely on a radio signal being successfully transmitted by Childs before Blair destroyed the communications room. Thus, after the explosion of the base camp, the rescue team would arrive and find MacReady and Childs still alive. Carpenter has not disclosed any other details.

In September 2006, it was announced in "Fangoria" magazine that Strike Entertainment, the production company behind "Slither" and the "Dawn of the Dead" remake, is looking for a writer or writers to write a theatrical prequel to "The Thing". [cite web|url = http://www.fangoria.com/news_article.php?id=2650|title = September 6: THE THING prequel on the way|accessdate = 2006-09-08] Producton is said to be continuing. [ [http://www.comicmix.com/news/2008/09/14/the-thing-sequel-is-a-prequel/ Comic mix news, "prequel."] ]

As of early 2007, there have been two announced projects to expand the franchise. Sci-Fi planned to do a four-hour mini-series sequel to the film in 2003. Carpenter stated that he believed the project should proceed, but because of the lack of updates and the removal of all mention of it from the Sci-Fi Channel homepage, it is likely now abandoned.Fact|date=September 2008

According to Variety, Strike Entertainment and Universal Pictures are preparing to remake "The Thing". Ronald D. Moore is set to write the script with Marc Abraham and Eric Newman producing. David Foster, producer of the original film, will be executive producer of the remake. [citeweb|url = http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117954074.html?categoryid=13&cs=1|title = U preps for ‘Thing’ fling: Carpenter classic set for remake|author = Michael Fleming|date= 2006-11-16|accessdate = 2006-11-17] In a 2007 interview with Ronald D. Moore, Moore states that he is working on a script, but no date has been set for production. [Topel, Fred. "Battlestar Galactica: Ronald Moore talks about Earth". Craveonine, June 13, 2007.]

Theme Parks

In 2007, the Halloween Horror Nights event at Universal Studios in Orlando, Florida, the film property was designed as a haunted attraction called The Thing-Assimilation. Guests walked through Outpost 3113, a military facility where the remains of Outpost 31 were brought for scientific research. Scenes and props from the movie were re-created for the attraction, including the bodies of MacReady and Childs.

Books and comics

A novelization of the film based on the second draft of the screenplay was published in 1982 by Alan Dean Foster. Several alterations were made from the storyline of the film, such as the character called Windows having the name Sanders instead, and the addition of a sequence in which MacReady, Bennings and Childs are forced to chase after several infected dogs which escape into the Antarctic tundra (this sequence was featured in Lancaster's second draft of the screenplay). Generally however, the novelization is true to the film.

Dark Horse Comics published three comic miniseries sequels to the film, featuring the character of MacReady as the lone survivor of Outpost #31 and depicting Childs as infected. [ [http://www.uk.imdb.com/title/tt0084787/faq The Thing (1982) - FAQ ] ] The series was renamed "The Thing from Another World" after the original 1951 Howard Hawks film in order to avoid confusion and possible legal conflict with Marvel ComicsFantastic Four member, also named The Thing. After the comics' publication, John Carpenter stated he enjoyed the comics so much that he would adapt them if he ever filmed a sequel himself.Fact|date=April 2008

In 1997 the British Film Institute published a 96-page monograph on The Thing by Anne Billson in its BFI Modern Classics series. Billson was one of the first film critics to offer a rebuttal to the poor critical reception the film received on its initial release, suggesting it had been underrated by mainly elderly reviewers who didn't care for the science fiction or horror genres to begin with, especially when special effects were involved. She also noted the film had attracted a strong cult following in the interim.

Television

In 2007, "South Park" parodied the famous scene in which the men test samples of their blood by burning it with a wire in order to determine who is an alien. The episode "Lice Capades" depicts Eric Cartman — wearing a fur-lined jacket — sequestering the boys of South Park in the school tool shed and making them give him blood samples so that he can burn them in order to determine which of his classmates is infested with head lice. Kyle Broflovski berates Cartman for having gotten the idea by watching "The Thing".

In the first season of the "The X-Files", Episode Eight "Ice" adapts "Who Goes There?" in a manner similar to "The Thing", with Mulder and Scully investigating an unknown parasite which infects humans in an Arctic base.

In an episode of "The Outer Limits", stock footage of the helicopter landing at U.S. Outpost 31from the film, is re-used for an isolated compound in the 1995 series.

Season one of "Mighty Max" episode 12 "Out in the Cold Max encounters an Artic base inhabited by shape shifting aliens whos weakness is heat. The story plays out in a very similar fashion to the movie.

References

Further reading

* [http://outpost31.com/media/All_About_The_Thing.pdf eBook "All About ‘The THING’"; analyses the film in depth]

External links

*imdb title|id=0084787|title=The Thing
*rotten-tomatoes|id=1021244|title=The Thing
*mojo title|id=thing|title=The Thing
* [http://www.theofficialjohncarpenter.com/pages/themovies/th/th.html "The Thing" at theofficialjohncarpenter.com]
* [http://www.outpost31.com/index2.html Outpost #31 - The Ultimate THE THING Fan-Site]


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