The Thing

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clea was good in but im a cheerleader

boxcubed (boxcubed), Sunday, 8 September 2002 22:03 (twenty-three years ago)

R-R-R-ROWR:
http://ilx.wh3rd.net/images/cleaduvall.jpg

(Actually I only like her cos she reminds me of dreamy skate-punk princess Lois, who has way better hair)

Graham (graham), Sunday, 8 September 2002 22:49 (twenty-three years ago)

five months pass...
Getting back to The Thing, there's an Antarctic blog called Big Dead Place that has a fun Antarctic-biased review of it

Chris Barrus (xibalba), Monday, 24 February 2003 23:53 (twenty-three years ago)

ten months pass...
is this another of those "i watched the movie having read a long-ago thread on it then went back and looked at the thread and all these k-brill concepts i imagined were in the thread as i watched the move really were my own... OR WERE THEY?" moments? (I had a massive one with the Pullman series)

coz ok i just watched the movie and then "remembered" this whole mark s bit where he's totally sympathizing with the "thing" and spins this great hypothesis about how mcready is clearly "thing" but has decided by the strength of his will to be human that it doesn't matter. and also about how the "thing" is always in us, and in fact is our mutual fear and at the end, reduced to panic, everyone is reduced to "fire cleans all" which is as unscientific as you can get (and clearly the surface-opposition is science v. grotesque).

also about how blair ceases to panic and becomes "okay" when he reaches the same conclusion w/r/t the "thing" -- i.e. that it doesn't matter.

all of which i guess is part of the "so what if the thing imitates us exactly" except it's also all the BAD things the thing does are entirely human. except the thing gets to make k-cool spaceships too!

i may also have read all this elsewhere.

okay I need to read the book and see "the faculty" now.

also the initial scene with the thing and the dogs is totally horrifying as is the arms-getting-chomped scene, and the way the narrative closure with the two burned stations kicks this whole "statement of human nature" thing into high-gear.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 13 January 2004 06:21 (twenty-two years ago)

all my best work = completely in other people's hedz

(if true, this is the coolest thing evah btw) (best aspect: it can be totally real and totally unproveable simultaneously)

mark s (mark s), Tuesday, 13 January 2004 14:51 (twenty-two years ago)

You can make this help you vis a vis If...the book: find a head, open it up and scoop out contents, put CPU of your computah in the hole and you will bne
DOING YOU BEST WORK IN SOMEONE ELSES HEAD.

Pete (Pete), Tuesday, 13 January 2004 16:34 (twenty-two years ago)

I'm sad because Jel stole by joke.

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 13 January 2004 17:44 (twenty-two years ago)

Its this thing.

Pete (Pete), Tuesday, 13 January 2004 17:45 (twenty-two years ago)

(I hab a code.)

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 13 January 2004 17:46 (twenty-two years ago)

okay check this too -- thing only strikes between individuals, not in a group, so v. v. obv that which lurks behind the veneer of social convention and perfect candidate for Lacanian reading w/r/t "there is no big Other" i.e. that the rules of interaction of the crew are a necessary fiction, reinforced when everyone thinks mcready is the thing but follow him anyway. hence the basis of their downfall is their exile of blair -- safer to stay close to the thing than let it lurk.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 13 January 2004 17:53 (twenty-two years ago)

"also about how blair ceases to panic and becomes "okay" when he reaches the same conclusion w/r/t the "thing" -- i.e. that it doesn't matter"

I thought that Blair WAS a "thing" by that point, that it had assimilated him just before he could hang himself (a noose in the background, isn't there?). But according to this, realising a lack of difference between the thing and the not-thing = becoming the thing-in-itself?

Neil Willett (Neil Willett), Tuesday, 13 January 2004 20:13 (twenty-two years ago)

I saw "The Thing" again recently. Popular art-rockers ESTEL were using it as visuals to a concert of theirs. I was sitting beside a guy who had never seen it before, and his "HOLY FUCK" reaction to the "You've got to be fucking kidding" bit was a joy to behold.

so maybe I do like this film after all.

DV (dirtyvicar), Tuesday, 13 January 2004 23:21 (twenty-two years ago)

I watched this again over winter break, and I must have spent an hour as I tried to fall asleep that night contemplating possible events that could transpire in the minutes after the film ends. I realize how beside the point this is, sorry. At the end of the movie, do the two guys left even have any materials left with which to burn themselves? Do they even have a lighter and a knife so that they could at least perform a Thing test on themselves? If one of them was a Thing, would it even allow either one of those things to happen, or is it busy attacking the other guy as the credits roll?

Dan I., Wednesday, 14 January 2004 00:19 (twenty-two years ago)

neil that's a fantastic gag!

Dan I think the point is that it's just the two of them, so the "thing" could obviously just eat the other since there's no other people around to get in its way, or it could just wait until they both froze and only it would wake up, or etc. i.e. there's nothing to be done.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Wednesday, 14 January 2004 00:43 (twenty-two years ago)

mark s:
i suspect childs's thing-dom is kept exactly as ambiguous

i like the dig at humanity: the ultra-perceptive dogs realize that the new dog is the thing within 20 seconds, we have to watch a 90 minute movie and still don't know!*

*i think we do know though... in the last scene when Childs takes a pull of whiskey, MacReady shoots him a kinda "knowing" glance, which i interpreted as "why the hell would the thing be drinking alcohol?"... the thing wants to proliferate, not impede it's spread by killing it's own cells with alcohol!

also, there's this i ran across while trying researching spelling.

RayM:
Also, do you think there's a clue as to where Blair gets infected>
short scene: the dog walks down the hall into blair's(?) room and the shadow of blair's head(?) turns his head real quick followed by a quick fade to black edit.

other thoughts:
i was impressed on how well the thing always cleaned up after itself off-camera because on-camera it was always making a bloody gooey mess.

gygax! (gygax!), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 18:06 (twenty-two years ago)

shoot, that link was supposed to be to the IMDB message board for the thing, not necessarily that post in particular.

gygax! (gygax!), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 18:07 (twenty-two years ago)

http://64.95.118.51/images/opti/28/fe/0345329457-resized200.jpg

A long time ago I did a report at school comparing The Thing to this book. (Probably terrible writing and I don't have it any more, but anyways.) I don't know if anyone ever explicitly acknowledged a debt, but there are big similarities. Maybe it's a case of second-hand influence or something. Regardless I think this movie in fact does more justice than any other movie to the style of HP Lovecraft writing. Which is really cool, seeing that aside from his cult followers- his stuff gets a lot less use than it should, after doing more than anyone else to influence the best and most popular of the horror genre like Stephen King. I've seen it written that many horror movie fans are waiting for the day when someone does a really good Lovecraft movie (with arguable exceptions like the comedic Reanimator or Dagon) but until then The Thing comes closest.

sucka (sucka), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 23:39 (twenty-two years ago)

interesting... that Lovecraft story predates "Who Goes There" by a couple (2) years.

gygax! (gygax!), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 23:44 (twenty-two years ago)

John Campbell who wrote "Who Goes There" was editor of a famous 40's pulp sci-fi magazine who would have been familar with Lovecraft, but the Lovecraft story is less close to "Who goes there" and Howard Hawk's Thing than it is to John Carpenter's (I think the original just ends with killing the space monster, but Carpenter's has apocalyptic implications). Love to read that Anne Billson book to find out if I actually have a point or not.

sucka (sucka), Wednesday, 21 January 2004 00:35 (twenty-two years ago)

I always figured the shadow in the room was Palmer (the constantly stoned guy). It looked like him, anyway.

Gear! (Gear!), Wednesday, 21 January 2004 00:51 (twenty-two years ago)

I don't know if anyone ever explicitly acknowledged a debt, but there are big similarities.

Occasional poster Matt Maxwell mentioned this in conversation to me a few years back; it's an understandable comparison to draw.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 21 January 2004 01:39 (twenty-two years ago)

Cool ned! I'm a big Lovecraft fan and this was always one of my favorite horror movies.

sucka (sucka), Wednesday, 21 January 2004 03:50 (twenty-two years ago)

I am not aware of any big similarities between The Thing and At The Mountains Of Madness.

DV (dirtyvicar), Wednesday, 21 January 2004 16:41 (twenty-two years ago)

There's this thing called a 'setting,' see. (And beyond that I can think of others.)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 21 January 2004 16:47 (twenty-two years ago)

yeah, setting, yeah. then there is also things that come with the setting, like snow, dogs, it being very cold, and so on. but one of them features a lost city of the Elder Race, while the other doesn't. And one of them features a shape-shifting alien that infects people, and the other doesn't.

crucially, there are no mountains in The Thing, or giant penguins, or shoggoths.

DV (dirtyvicar), Wednesday, 21 January 2004 17:01 (twenty-two years ago)

Those giant penguins, I like them.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 21 January 2004 17:17 (twenty-two years ago)

I wish there were real giant penguins.

DV (dirtyvicar), Wednesday, 21 January 2004 17:25 (twenty-two years ago)

Named Opus.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 21 January 2004 17:28 (twenty-two years ago)

the Thing vs. Mountains of Madness shares some plot. (Really searching the memory so some of this might be wrong).

-In Mountains of Madness, before discovering the mountains, the Antarctic expedition from Miskatonic U. used special drills and dug up what they thought were petrified remains of an unknown life form. The remains are left on a dissection table in a tent. They turn out not to be petrified at all, the heat allows them to revive, and they eat everybody in the camp. The 2 main characters have been away on a scouting trip in a plane, and they return and find nothing but tracks in the snow. For the rest of the book they are haunted by what might, or might not be the Old Ones hunting them outside in the snow (they can't tell if it's howling or just the wind.)

In the movie the frozen alien was left to thaw on a dissection table, and ate an entire Norwegian outpost leaving nothing but tracks. The two main character Americans figure this out after a helicopter trip. When they return to their base they are haunted for the rest of the movie by what might, or might not be the alien hunting them in the shape of their friends.

-If I remember right, Carpenter's vs. of The Thing has some kinds of hints that the shapeshifter was able to reach populated areas, but the two remaining characters are already going to die and can't warn anybody. A paranoid, doomy ending instead of a victory (like in the original movie) is a pretty Lovecraftian touch.

sucka (sucka), Thursday, 22 January 2004 05:55 (twenty-two years ago)

the feel of the stories is very different. Lovecraft's is cosmic horror (ohmygod, human life was created by aliens! (a new and exciting concept in the 1920s)) while The Thing is more visceral horror (ohmygod, I am being eaten by aliens!).

the ancient things in the Lovecraft story are not like the Thing (although arguably the shoggoths kind of are).

anyway, tekeli-li.

DV (dirtyvicar), Thursday, 22 January 2004 10:23 (twenty-two years ago)

one month passes...
All I could think of when I watched this movie last night (on my new dvd, hooray) was that all poor MacReady wants to do is go up to his shack and drink, and that it's pretty rude of the Thing to keep a man from his shack-drinkin'.

Jordan (Jordan), Monday, 1 March 2004 20:04 (twenty-two years ago)

five years pass...

Really cool story, the movie retold from the Thing's perspective: http://clarkesworldmagazine.com/watts_01_10/

The last line is pretty cringey though

Dan I., Monday, 11 January 2010 08:53 (sixteen years ago)

re: Carpenter and Lovecraft: anybody seen In The Mouth of Madness? I watched it with some friends and the general consensus was that it did a great job of capturing the feel of Lovecraft, but we were all v. high and I am having trouble remembering specifics.

I got gin but I'm not a ginger (bernard snowy), Monday, 11 January 2010 12:42 (sixteen years ago)

two months pass...

I knew about the reboot or whatever but wait a goddamn minute:

So what makes "The Thing" different? First off, the film isn't so much a remake as a prequel, or what the producers are calling a companion piece to the original. As "Thing" fans may recall, early in the film, trying to understand why a Norwegian helicopter had been chasing a runaway husky before it crashed, Kurt Russell returns to the Norwegian base camp where he finds evidence that its research team -- now all dead -- had dug something out of the ice, apparently awakening an extraterrestrial creature that had been buried for thousands of years.

"That's the story we tell in this film," says Marc Abraham, who is producing the movie with his Strike Entertainment partner Eric Newman. "We go back to that original Norwegian camp and try to figure out what happened. It's like a crime scene, with an ax in the door, and the audience gets to be the detective, trying to piece together what horrible things have occurred."

In the fine tradition of the prequel to The Exorcist.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 16 March 2010 19:23 (sixteen years ago)

except... that there was a fairly recent video game that covered all this ground already!

http://image.com.com/gamespot/images/bigboxshots/4/457774_front.jpg

✌.✰|ʘ‿ʘ|✰.✌ (Steve Shasta), Tuesday, 16 March 2010 20:11 (sixteen years ago)

Kinda thinking about playing that at some point, just out of curiosity. I heard that it was kind of a buggy mess, but still interesting? It might already be too dated to go back to, though...

Nhex, Tuesday, 16 March 2010 20:19 (sixteen years ago)

really great game imo. i bet it would still play great. has a nice squad system and manages to work in some nice scares. quite tough tho.

aarrissi-a-roni, Tuesday, 16 March 2010 20:28 (sixteen years ago)

haha the biologist who goes crazy and builds a spaceship in a cave in the ice = called BLAIR do you SEE?

wait, um no I don't see!

what was Mark on about here...?

Get the Flaps Out (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 16 March 2010 21:16 (sixteen years ago)

probably a Tony Blair reference...?

smoking cigarette shades? it doesn't even make any sense. (HI DERE), Tuesday, 16 March 2010 21:22 (sixteen years ago)

or the facts of life

kingkongvsgodzilla, Tuesday, 16 March 2010 21:26 (sixteen years ago)

I thought the game was a sequel rather than a prequel

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 16 March 2010 21:56 (sixteen years ago)

if it wasn't though it should have been

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 16 March 2010 21:57 (sixteen years ago)

game was a sequel

Sex Sexual (kingfish), Tuesday, 16 March 2010 22:10 (sixteen years ago)

it's a good sign that the new movie is going to have a cast of complete unknowns. that at least gives one hope. isn't it weird that NONE of the original '82 cast have ever done much since?

piscesx, Wednesday, 17 March 2010 01:48 (sixteen years ago)

Well I'm sure Kurt Russell would like us all to forget Cap'n Ron and all but he has done other things.

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 17 March 2010 01:50 (sixteen years ago)

ah yeah i meant aside from the big guy.

piscesx, Wednesday, 17 March 2010 02:06 (sixteen years ago)

keith david & wilford brimley kept p busy

:3 (cankles), Wednesday, 17 March 2010 02:18 (sixteen years ago)

Love this movie and enjoyed the game a lot too tbh.

t(o_o)t (ENBB), Wednesday, 17 March 2010 02:19 (sixteen years ago)

called BLAIR do you SEE?

ref to exorcist yes?

bracken free ditch (Ste), Wednesday, 17 March 2010 09:16 (sixteen years ago)

and try to figure out what happened. It's like a crime scene, with an ax in the door, and the audience gets to be the detective, trying to piece together what horrible things have occurred."

erm but we kinda know already

bracken free ditch (Ste), Wednesday, 17 March 2010 09:18 (sixteen years ago)

look i know it’s alien but i thought you guys would appreciate

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Friday, 21 June 2024 11:34 (one year ago)

an alienne cheftburfting vpon the table of a man

katy perry (prison service) (bizarro gazzara), Friday, 21 June 2024 12:12 (one year ago)

one month passes...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zNWSQgvnyzk

Maresn3st, Friday, 9 August 2024 09:14 (one year ago)

hello, I look like a man wearing a John Carpenter mask

StanM, Friday, 9 August 2024 09:23 (one year ago)

Just saw that in my feed.

The Zing from Another URL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 18 August 2024 00:38 (one year ago)

And thought the same about the mask

The Zing from Another URL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 18 August 2024 04:25 (one year ago)

Wililam Tuttle iirc.

The Zing from Another URL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 20 August 2024 23:01 (one year ago)

Although maybe that was one mask he didn't make

The Zing from Another URL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 20 August 2024 23:06 (one year ago)

seven months pass...

Meanwhile in real life: scientist’s ‘disturbing’ behavior, death threats at Antarctic base
https://interestingengineering.com/culture/scientist-disturbing-behavior-antarctic-probe-begins

Naledi, Tuesday, 25 March 2025 09:46 (one year ago)

six months pass...

https://i.imgur.com/1hf960g.png

imperial frfr (Steve Shasta), Sunday, 19 October 2025 02:49 (seven months ago)

four months pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sDIaL9Begao

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 24 February 2026 21:32 (three months ago)

throw me in the briarpatch baby

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 24 February 2026 21:49 (three months ago)


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