Plot
At an Antarctica research site, the discovery of an alien craft leads to a confrontation between graduate student Kate Lloyd and scientist Dr. Sander Halvorson.
Release Year: 2011
Rating: 6.3/10 (30,937 voted)
Critic's Score: 49/100
Director:
Matthijs van Heijningen Jr.
Stars: Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Joel Edgerton, Ulrich Thomsen
Storyline At an Antarctica research site, the discovery of an alien craft leads to a confrontation between graduate student Kate Lloyd and scientist Dr. Sander Halvorson. While Dr. Halvorson keeps to his research, Kate partners with Sam Carter, a helicopter pilot, to pursue the alien life form.
Writers: Eric Heisserer, John W. Campbell Jr.
Cast: Mary Elizabeth Winstead
-
Kate Lloyd
Joel Edgerton
-
Sam Carter
Ulrich Thomsen
-
Dr. Sander Halvorson
Eric Christian Olsen
-
Adam Finch
Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje
-
Jameson
Paul Braunstein
-
Griggs
Trond Espen Seim
-
Edvard Wolner
Kim Bubbs
-
Juliette
Jørgen Langhelle
-
Lars
Jan Gunnar Røise
-
Olav
Stig Henrik Hoff
-
Peder
Kristofer Hivju
-
Jonas
Jo Adrian Haavind
-
Henrik
Carsten Bjørnlund
-
Karl
Jonathan Walker
-
Colin
(as Jonathan Lloyd Walker)
Opening Weekend: $8,493,665
(USA)
(16 October 2011)
(2996 Screens)
Gross: $16,907,450
(USA)
(13 November 2011)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
An enormous amount of screen shots from the first movie were kept on the set while filming at all times, in order to ensure that the Norwegian station would be rebuilt to the smallest details.
Goofs:
Incorrectly regarded as goofs:
Since logically, there must be a period in the year where each point on the surface of the Earth experiences night and day in a 24 hour period (since the Earth rotates rather than jumps instantly so as to have 24hrs night or day at the poles), it is not a goof that the plot depicts night and day in Antarctica within a 24 hour period. This is possible for any point in the either polar region, providing the observer is not situated at the EXACT pole of rotation.
Quotes:
[first lines]
Peder:
[In Norwegian]
Okay, I've got another one. A good one. A man and woman are making love one night when their young boy walks in.
User Review
Thing Prequel review!
Rating: 8/10
Just came back from a preview screening of the new 'The Thing,' a
prequel to the 1980s film 'The Thing,' which, is itself a remake.
Hahah...
I am a HUGE fan of the 80s 'The Thing' so I was rather nervous about
this 'prequel.' It seemed just a remake, but with CGI, and a female
lead .
HOWEVER .It's surprisingly really good. It is NOT just a beat for beat
remake of the remake, AND it contains some excellent practical monster
effects early on.
REALLY GOOD MONSTERS. As in straight up LOVECRAFTIAN beasties...
And when the creatures do go more digital the designs are so lurid and
insane and horrendous that it worked for me. It feels right and is
super gross....Great sound design...drippy, snarly stuff....Good bass
heavy ominous soundtrack as well.
So yes, consider me very pleased and very surprised.
(ALSO: Do NOT immediately get up when the credits roll or you will miss
awesomeness that connects this film into the 80s one....)
I really was surprised and enjoyed it a lot. I feel that fans of the
original remake (man that sounds silly to write) will be pleasantly
surprised and enjoy this prequel as well!
Plot
Scientists in the Antarctic are confronted by a shape-shifting alien that assumes the appearance of the people that it kills.
Release Year: 1982
Rating: 8.2/10 (119,659 voted)
Director:
John Carpenter
Stars: Kurt Russell, Wilford Brimley, Keith David
Storyline An American scientific expedition to the frozen wastes of the Antarctic is interrupted by a group of seemingly mad Norwegians pursuing and shooting a dog. The helicopter pursuing the dog crashes leaving no explanation for the chase. During the night, the dog mutates and attacks other dogs in the cage and members of the team that investigate. The team soon realises that an alien life-form with the ability to take over other bodies is on the loose and they don't know who may already have been taken over.
Writers: Bill Lancaster, John W. Campbell Jr.
Cast: Kurt Russell
-
R.J. MacReady
Wilford Brimley
-
Dr. Blair
(as A. Wilford Brimley)
T.K. Carter
-
Nauls
David Clennon
-
Palmer
Keith David
-
Childs
Richard Dysart
-
Dr. Copper
Charles Hallahan
-
Vance Norris
Peter Maloney
-
George Bennings
Richard Masur
-
Clark
Donald Moffat
-
Garry
Joel Polis
-
Fuchs
Thomas G. Waites
-
Windows
(as Thomas Waites)
Norbert Weisser
-
Norwegian
Larry J. Franco
-
Norwegian Passenger with Rifle
(as Larry Franco)
Nate Irwin
-
Helicopter Pilot
Filming Locations: Kimberley, British Columbia, Canada
Box Office Details
Budget: $15,000,000
(estimated)
Opening Weekend: $3,107,897
(USA)
(27 June 1982)
(840 Screens)
Gross: $19,629,760
(USA)
(31 December 1982)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
There are 52 gunshots fired in the movie.
Goofs:
Continuity:
As Mac comes out of the supply room with the flare and dynamite, the TNT sticks he is holding are almost falling apart and he is holding them by one stick. In the following shots of Mac the TNT sticks are suddenly wrapped tightly with black tape again and he holds all the sticks.
Quotes: Garry:
My God, what was happening to him? MacReady:
If it had any more time to finish... just another minute or two, it would have looked and sounded and acted just like Bennings! Garry:
I don't know what you're saying. MacReady:
That wasn't Bennings. It was one of those things out there, trying to imitate him, Garry. Come on. Garry:
MacReady, I know Bennings, I've known him for ten years. He's my friend. MacReady:
We've gotta burn the rest of him.
User Review
A classic that still holds up to this very day
Rating: 10/10
"I know I'm human. And if you were all these things, then you'd just attack
me right now, so some of you are still human. This thing doesn't want to
show itself, it wants to hide inside an imitation. It'll fight if it has to,
but it's vulnerable out in the open. If it takes us over, then it has no
more enemies, nobody left to kill it. And then it's won."
John Carpenter's "The Thing" is one of the most entertaining horror films
ever made fast, clever and purely exciting from start to finish. This is
how all movies of the genre should be made.
Taking place in the Antarctic in 1982, the movie focuses specifically on a
group of American scientists. We are given no introduction to their mission,
but are thrust into their existence when a pair of seemingly crazy
Norwegians appears at their base camp, chasing an escaped dog. The
Norwegians are killed, and the dog finds its way into the colony, which is
when things really start to get crazy.
It is soon made quite clear that the "dog" is actually a shape-shifting
alien organism, which manifests itself upon the physical form of its victims
in other words, it begins to eat the Americans, and imitate them so well
that the remaining humans cannot discern the difference between their
friends and enemies
The pack of scientists, led by MacReady (Kurt Russell), begin to fight for
their own survival, using wits instead of brawn. If the Thing is indeed
amongst them, then how are they to go about revealing it? How many Things
are there? How can the Thing be killed? (Or can it be destroyed at
all?)
The creature's origins in the film are explained easily: Thirty thousand
years ago a spacecraft plummeted to Earth, and was frozen in the Antarctic
ice. The Thing tried to escape, and was discovered in the ice by the
Norwegians, who unknowingly released it from its natural
prison.
"The Thing," the movie itself, is similar to Ridley Scott's iconic "Alien"
(1979). Many comparisons have been made the protagonists are stranded in a
desolate area, stalked by a seldom seen foe that manages to kill them off
one-by-one. However, "The Thing" for all practical purposes came
first.
Based on the famous short story "Who Goes There?" by John W. Campbell, Jr.
(writing under pseudonym as Don A. Stuart), the film was originally adapted
as a feature production in 1951 by Howard Hawks and Christian Nyby. The
result was "The Thing From Another World," an unarguable classic. But to be
fair, it bore little resemblance to the short story, and Carpenter's remake
does it more justice.
The idea of the Thing being able to adapt the physicality of anyone is what
essentially makes this movie so great, and is the most vital link to the
short story. In 1951 the special effects were simply too poor to reasonably
portray the shape-shifting organism, but thirty-one years brought many
advances in SFX.
Creature effects artist Rob Bottin does an excellent job of turning what
could have easily become a cheesy gore-fest into a startlingly frightening
(and realistic) mess of blood and fear. The Thing, although never actually
taking one specific form, is constantly seen in a morphing stage, and the
effects are simply superb. They still pack a punch twenty-two years
later.
Ennio Morricone's score (nominated for a Razzie Award at the time) is a bit
too electronic and tinny, but nevertheless haunting when used correctly.
From the fact that its cast consists entirely of males, to the fact that its
ending is one of the most thought-provoking and untypical conclusions of all
time, "The Thing" by any standards is unconventional Hollywood at its
best. It comes as no surprise that, at the time of its release, "The Thing"
performed poorly in theaters, and "E.T." released the same year and
featuring a much kinder alien became the higher-grossing picture of the
two (by far).
In the long run, however, "The Thing" is superior in almost every
conceivable way. Spielberg's tale is outdated and flopped during its 20th
Anniversary Re-Release. "The Thing," on the other hand, has gradually
climbed a ladder of cult classics it is one of the most famous non-famous
movies ever made.
Carpenter is notorious for having a very uneven career from his amazing
"Assault on Precinct 13" (1976) to the magnificent "Halloween" (1978) to the
disappointing and silly "Escape from L.A." (1996), "The Thing" remains his
very best motion picture. Although its reputation over the years has never
been honorary enough to land it a spot on most "great movies" lists, "The
Thing" is still one of my favorite horror films, and upon close inspection
masterfully crafted. It is a daring and ingenious thrill-ride that is
simultaneously unique and chilling a genuine relief for film buffs who are
tired of the same old horror knock-offs. This one, at the very least, is
genuinely unpredictable.
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