The
Thing Movie Review:
The
place is a snow-covered Antarctic. A chopper is flying around
and search for something. Suddenly are they get sight of
a dog, that they immediately start shooting after. The dog
runs for dear life and find refuge in an American science
institute station. The Americans catch the noise and runs
out to see what´s going on. The chopper lands at the science
station, and out runs an old buffer and begins to hunt the
dog. He has explosive in his hand and is so ardent when
he throws it, that he drops it behind himself instead so
the chopper blows up. The dog runs to the Americans to seek
protection. The old buffer shouts something in Norwegian
that they doesn´t understand, and begins then to shoot wildly
after the dog. One American gets hit in the leg by a bullet.
The Yankees get hard pressed and feels forced to shoot the
Norwegian in the eye.
This
is the beginning of John Carpenter´s remake of "The Thing".
What the polar explorers not know, is that the Siberian
husky dog is a creature from outer space which has taken
a dogs shape. The creature can transform itself to an exact
copy of the lifeform it kills. It does so when it is alone
with someone, and soon are the polar explorers doesn´t know
any longer who´s friend or enemy.
"The
Thing" was a dead failure when it was released at the cinemas
in 82´, but has later on been a gigantic cult film on video.
The reason for that it didn´t went home at the pictures,
was that it was released at the same time as "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial".
Whereas "E.T." was warm and gentle and was about an extraterrestial
being who wished everyone well, was "The Thing" the direct
contrary. Most criticism got the dabbling special effects,
which was considered to be immoral. John Carpenter oneself
think that "The Thing" is the best he´s done. See for that
reason his powerlessness, when no one in Hollywood were
willing to touch him even with a barge-pole after the movies
release. Carpenter went without work for a couple of years.
Luckily has "The Thing" been revaluated, and Rob Bottin´s
effects are now considered to be among the most sensational
that ever been beheld.
"The
Thing" is Carpenter´s darkest film. There is no room for
any laughs or any romance (all roles are played by men).
The whole film is permeated with a dreary and dejected atmosphere,
that only becomes worse and worse when the polar explorers
realize that they probably are finished. The monotonous
score goes a long way to that impression, and for once isn´t
it Carpenter who´s made it, but Ennio Morricone. But it
sounds like Carpenter.
Kent
Palmgren
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