(1982)
Dir - John Carpenter
Overall: GREAT
To get the elephant out of the room, yes John Carpenter's now seminal The Thing was considered a box office and critical failure when it was first released. All these decades later, the film's legacy still seems inescapable from its initial commercial shortcomings, something that Carpenter is asked about in practically every interview that he has given since. One can sense a tone of annoyance if not outright bitterness in the filmmaker when the subject is relentlessly brought up. "So, everyone hated The Thing when it came out but now it's seen as a classic. What's that like?". Such hackneyed inquisitions are then followed by Carpenter once again pointing out that yes, everyone hated it and called him a "pornographer of violence", and that his career would have gone much different if people appreciated it then the way that they do now. This is code for "I wouldn't have had to exclusively do B-movies for the next thirty years". Now retired from movie-making and regularly pointing out how much of a pain in the ass the industry is, we can understand the man's frustration with the too-little-too-late of it all. No wonder he just makes music with his son these days.
Yet obviously, The Thing's complicated commercial appeal has nothing to do with its quality as a film. Context paints a clear picture as to why it irked more people when released than dazzled them. It was put out in an oversaturated sci-fi summer, (even coming out the same exact day as Blade Runner), where it competed directly against the box office behemoth that is Steven Spielberg's E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, its intentionally ambiguous ending and over-the-top gore set sitting uncomfortably with an American public that was dealing with Reaganomics and ignited Cold War tensions. So in other words, great movie, wrong time. Then again, that timing can only be viewed as detrimental due to how this was the antithesis of a feel good movie, which is to say the antithesis of E.T.. In point of fact, The Thing was exactly the right movie to come out in the summer of 1982, and a movie that only could be as it is due to the state of things at the time.
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| Yet another tragedy that we can and should blame this asshole for. |
First off, consider John Carpenter's career in the early 1980s. Not counting two well-received yet often overlooked television movies to close out the 1970s, Carpenter had three straight hits in a row, including his breakthrough Halloween. The Fog made twenty times its budget and Escape from New York's $50 million take is nothing to sneeze at. Neither of these films shared much resemblance to Halloween from a stylistic standpoint, (aside from Carpenter's excellent and unassuming synth scores decorated all three), but they were each done without major studio backing. Carpenter had proved that he could get butts in the seats with both genre material and with minimal finances to work with, so the stage was set to see what he could do with a lot more money and Universal Studios behind him.
It is important to note that Carpenter easily could have ridden his own Halloween coattails with an endless stream of slasher movies, but he wisely left that to less imaginative hacks and/or up-and-coming imitators. Though Carpenter did stay within the realm of B-movies, he chose not to repeat himself, going from masked babysitter killer, to ghost pirates, to Snake Plissken, to now, a doppelgänger alien. Yet not just a doppelgänger alien, but a doppelgänger alien done with a budget more than double of what he ever had to work with, two weeks of rehearsal time, challenging exterior and interior shooting, and probably the most ambitious practical monster effects yet attempted by anybody. Also, The Thing would be Carpenter's first remake, taking Christian Nyby's popular yet antiquated The Thing from Another World and revamping in it with an R-rating in a high-octane era of K-Y jelly monstrosities, profanity, and both human and dog bodies being ripped apart without the camera flinching away from the action.
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| Awww, I wanna pet it! |
Also changing it up for his big studio debut, Carpenter insisted on not writing the script, nor composing the music. That said, the results are still in line with Carpenter's auteur sensibilities. This is not just because he added some atmospheric sounds to certain sections where composer Ennio Morricone's score proved insufficient, and also because he reworked aspects of Bill Lancaster's script, itself, (like the Nyby original), being an adaptation of John W. Campbell Jr.'s 1938 novella Who Goes There?. The finished product is still Carpenter-esque because the bleak outlook that is on the surface of The Thing, (enhanced of course by the bleak, isolated, and claustrophobic Antarctic setting), represents a steady point of view that the filmmaker likewise employed in his proceeding projects. Just like Halloween offered up a world where evil was relentless and always lurking, and Escape from New York featured an antihero who oozes misanthropic cynicism, The Thing shows us the all too unfortunate and all too relatable outcome of distrust amongst our fellow man who instead of bonding together in a state of crisis, turn against each other in paranoia.
George A. Romero explored a similar idea in his Dead Trilogy, (two of which, Night of the Living Dead and Dawn of the Dead, had come out by this point), and New Hollywood in general was ripe with filmmakers delving into the more tortured and austere aspects of the human experience. Movies without happy endings, movies that put both the characters and the audience in the uncomfortable seat, presenting a fallout to situations with no easy answers. In The Thing, the crew of Outpost 31 live in arduous conditions on a good day, cut off from the mainland and huddled together for months on end as they steer off cabin fever, boredom, and the unforgiving climate of their surroundings. So when a threat that is literally from another world gets unleashed upon them right at the onset of a crippling snow storm, it puts them in an even more compromised situation, which does not even take into account the fact that this particular alien threat is one that hides amongst their midst, only perceptible when its existence is threatened.
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| Make that EXTREMELY perceptible. |
This brings up the film's most interesting parallel. "The Thing" of the title takes over organic hosts in order to survive, and we can presume that it has been doing this across the cosmos for an untold amount of time. Yet it is alluded that it does this not by malevolent choice, but by its very nature; the nature to survive. In this context, is its behavior so different than that of the ragtag group of men that it faces up against? Every organic form that we see on screen, (human, extraterrestrial, even dog), are reacting violently only when threatened. That is to say, when their existence is threatened. Everyone is out for survival, and when your neighbor may be your enemy hiding in plain site, hello paranoia!
Wilford Brimley runs a little experiment on his computer that gives him an approximation on how long it would take this particular alien life form to assimilate the planet. We watch him quietly contemplating such dire information, staring at the screen with a forlorn expression until the next time that we see him, he is trashing the outpost with an axe, threatening to shoot anyone who stops him, and deliberately stranding himself and his comrades so that mankind can be spared its terrifying fate. The survival instincts of Brimley's senior biologist are triggered, just as the canines in dog handler Richard Masur's cages are when the Thing attacks them, just as Kurt Russell's helicopter pilot is when he takes charge with a flamethrower and demands that everyone get tied up for a blood test.
So we can say that The Thing represents what happens when we become our enemy. What we are trying desperately to stop from taking us over, we actually have something in common with. This concurrently runs with the very concept of the monster, something that looks like us, acts like us, practically IS us and more to the point, acts out in a rage when it is backed into a corner, just like we do. We may lose our humanity by being absorbed by the Thing since it literally destroys us, but what is left standing there with our organic facade can pass through a crowd and co-mingle so perfectly that perhaps it does not even realize that it is absorbed.
This idea is toyed with in the film and feeds into the paranoid trajectory, and it is also one that heightens how unsettling it all is. Call it a fear of Communism or a loss of individuality, but the essence of what is going on is our failure to trust, our failure to use our humanity to overcome a threat. That very individuality that we cling to is part of what pits us against each other, forces us to take a survival of the fittest approach to the situation as opposed to binding together and making a unified opposition. All of that goes out the window when we are pushed to the breaking point, and at the end of the day, we look out only for ourselves instead of risking ruination by collaboration.
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| MacReady cannot even be a good loser against a computer, let alone trust his fellow researchers. |
Carpenter has stated that his decision to fill the cast exclusively with men allowed him to not have to address the issue of what kind of dynamics a female or females would bring to the proceedings. This is to say that there need not be any love interest for anyone, no flirtation, no "Will they or won't they?" tropes in a story that was not about such things. A woman member of the crew would have been unnecessary baggage. Some could see this as being a misogynistic move on Carpenter's part, but it actually adds yet another layer to what is going on. It gives the movie a similar motif to John McTiernan's Predator from five years later, where a bunch of jacked-up, macho mercenary dudes get picked off by, (once again), an alien threat that all-too-easily outmatches them until the top-billed hero is left beaten but alive. Yet whereas Predator had a clear victor in Arnold Schwarzenegger's Dutch, (who bests the extraterrestrial baddie and gets whisked off in a helicopter), the finale of The Thing is neither clear-cut nor uplifting.
Kurt Russell is technically left standing once his entire outpost is blown to smithereens and the Thing in its monster form has likewise been exploded, but he is hardly in a position to celebrate. As was his plan, he is not surviving this ordeal but also, neither is the alien. Mission accomplished in this respect. Yet what emerges during the closing moments of the film? It is Keith David's chief mechanic, someone who has been missing during the last moments of action and seems to be less haggard than Russell, by comparison. What has he been doing when the whole base was going up in a fiery blaze? We are meant to wonder this just as Russell's character does when he is collapsed in exhaustion, drinking the official giallo beverage of J&B Scotch and offering it to David in an peace treaty out of necessity. If David is assimilated by the creature, Russell is too wiped by the whole ordeal to do much about it. Might as well both sit and "see what happens". Neither man trusts the other, how could they after everything that they have endured and every way in which we have seen them react? There is no rescue, no victor, just two men, (or possibly two aliens, or possibly one alien), collapsing in the freezing cold, downing some booze to steer off that cold in futility, and leaving the audience in a state of uncertainty.
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| "You gonna hog all that J.B. or can a potential doppelgänger get some?" |
Of course, we cannot discuss The Thing without also discussing Rob Bottin's practical effects work. It is a solid contender for the best that has ever been done, the artist working himself into a frenzy during production that resulted in exhaustion and pneumonia. The twenty-two-year-old Bottin refused to take a day off for over a year, sleeping on the Universal lot and overseeing every aspect of creature design even though he had a team of more than thirty people at his disposal. While the excessive work load may have been self-imposed in some respects and certainly detrimental to his health, the results solidified the man's legacy as one of the finest in the business.
The 1980s in general were the last great era of practical effects before computer generated imagery began overtaking things the following decade. Logically speaking then, the practice peaked around this time, so Bottin was able to deliver outstanding results that the rest of the production knew how to best utilized. This of course includes director of photography and regular Carpenter collaborator Dean Cundey, who not only captured the cold and sterile environment with blue lighting and muted costumes and decor, but also shot Bottin's effects for maximum impact. The film's editor Todd Ramsay also deserves a good amount of credit for being able to linger on the less convincing shots just long enough as to not distract from their artificiality. This includes David Clennon being revealed as the Thing and thrashing around with a Thomas G. Waites dummy in the air, an actual armless amputee stand-in wearing a Richard Dysart mask for half a second, and Randall William Cook's stop-motion animation which there was initially much more of yet only a few quick flashes made the final cut.
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| Just the world's hairiest man, making the world's best, (though less hairy), monster effects. |
Carpenter has always been a fan of showing the monster, (as opposed to the old timey and still frequented "power of suggestion" motif), though to be fare, the director also knows when to lay back and let the audience do the work. As discussed, the ending to The Thing goes out of its way not to spell things out, but there are plenty of other moments beforehand where suspense is cranked up in order to keep us guessing as to who is human and who is overtaken. We see merely the silhouette of a crew member when the chased dog from the opening of the movie moseys into the same room with him, Brimley's character exhibits curious behavior to say the least, and his calm pleading to be let out of his exile since he is "alright now" raises plenty of eyebrows, plus the aforementioned blood testing sequence is as white-knuckled as they get. Yet throughout the film, Carpenter makes it a point to get that creature on screen, and when you have Bottin's outstanding work to utilize, why would you not get it on screen as much as possible?
Thus, The Thing is a film that has its cake and eats it too. Large portions of it go by where the ensemble cast is merely sitting around and going about their mundane routines, only to begin snapping at each other in a fever of distrust as their circumstances grow more and more dire. There is mood setting throughout, heightened by Cundey's low-light cinematography and Ennio Morricone's Carpenter-like score. The ending is made for contemplation. Yet simultaneously, it is a smorgasbord for gross-out and heightened set pieces, with some of the most gnarly, gooey, and disturbing creature designs ever filmed. A 1981 public may have failed to recognize how masterfully it was all put together, but there is a laundry list of movies that arrived with a thud initially, only to grow in stature as the years went by until they reached their rightful place in cinema history. This is one of those films, and even though its misunderstood-to-lauded trajectory may have been an understandably bittersweet experience for Carpenter, thankfully the rest of us can just experience it as the gold standard of horror remakes that it is.













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