Rating: R
Genre:
Science Fiction
Release Date: 09/08/1998
SubTitles: English/Espanol
Dubbed: English/French/Espanol
Sound: DD5.1/DDS
Run Time: 109 min
Distributor/Studio: Universal Studios
John Carpenter's
The Thing is both a remake of
Howard Hawks' 1951 film of the same name and a re-adaptation of the
John W. Campbell Jr. story "Who Goes There?" on which it was based.
Carpenter's film is more faithful to
Campbell's story than
Hawks' version and also substantially more reliant on special effects, provided in abundance by a team of over 40 technicians, including veteran creature-effects artists
Rob Bottin and
Stan Winston. The film opens enigmatically with a Siberian Husky running through the Antarctic tundra, chased by two men in a helicopter firing at it from above. Even after the dog finds shelter at an American research outpost, the men in the helicopter (Norwegians from an outpost nearby) land and keep shooting. One of the Norwegians drops a grenade and blows himself and the helicopter to pieces; the other is shot dead in the snow by
Garry (
Donald Moffat), the American outpost captain. American helicopter pilot
MacReady (
Kurt Russell, fresh from
Carpenter's
Escape From New York) and camp doctor
Copper (
Richard Dysart) fly off to find the Norwegian base and discover some pretty strange goings-on. The base is in ruins, and the only occupants are a man frozen to a chair (having cut his own throat) and the burned remains of what could be one man or several men. In a side room,
Copper and
MacReady find a coffin-like block of ice from which something has been recently cut. That night at the American base, the Husky changes into the Thing, and the Americans learn first-hand that the creature has the ability to mutate into anything it kills. For the rest of the film the men fight a losing (and very gory) battle against it, never knowing if one of their own dwindling number is the Thing in disguise. Though resurrected as a cult favorite,
The Thing failed at the box office during its initial run, possibly because of its release just two weeks after
Steven Spielberg's warmly received
E.T.The Extra-Terrestrial. Along with
Ridley Scott's futuristic
Alien,
The Thing helped stimulate a new wave of
sci-fi horror films in which action and special effects wizardry were often seen as ends in themselves.
~ Anthony Reed, All Movie Guide