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The Thing (1982)
In John Carpenter's remake of Howard Hawks' 1951 classic
sci-fi horror film, it told about an alien threat at a remote
base, and about additional subsequent threats of personal estrangement,
powerlessness, distrust and alienation. It was considered to be
the first part of a so-called "Apocalypse Trilogy," followed
by Prince
of Darkness (1987) and In the Mouth of Madness (1995).
Carpenter's R-rated, dark and nihilistic cult
film was a mostly faithful, bleak and moody return to the original
1938 source (by scriptwriter Bill Lancaster), with clear homage to
the original 1951 film and to Ridley Scott's Alien
(1979). Its source was John W. Campbell, Jr.'s short story
or novella titled Who Goes There?, (with pen-name pseudonym
Don A. Stuart), first published in August 1938 in the popular US
sci-fi magazine Astounding Science Fiction.
The initial 1951 film was set 2,000 miles
north of Anchorage in a remote Arctic scientific research base in
the vicinity of the North Pole (Polar Expedition Six). In this remake
31 years later, the setting was in 1982 at a remote
Antarctica base (US Station 4, Outpost 31) at the South Pole amongst
a twelve-man US expeditionary crew of socially-isolated outcasts
who would soon be experiencing sub-zero temperatures and extreme
paranoia. Both films explored how an extra-terrestrial alien life-form
entity (frozen in ice and thawed) threatened US researchers. Carpenter's
film tagline warned: "Man is the warmest place to hide." The
pulsating electronic score by Italian composer Ennio Morricone added
to the film's suspense.
In the early 1980s, Carpenter's under-appreciated work
was interpreted as an allegory for the AIDS-epidemic at the time
- with its all-male cast forced to take blood tests to prove that
they might or might not be infected by alien cells. Although this
cult classic (about a possible apocalypse caused by a malevolent
alien that could take the form of any living creature) had tremendous
but excessively-graphic, gory and grotesque special and visual effects,
it was mostly a box-office failure. On a budget of approximately
$15 million, the film grossed only $19.6 million (domestic). Afterwards,
many claimed that the film's summer competition from Spielberg's
more alien-friendly E.T.:
The Extra-Terrestrial (1982) accounted for its poor reception.
It was also competing against three other notable sci-fi films in
the same year, Star
Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982), Poltergeist
(1982) and Blade Runner (1982).
- before the title screen, the film presented the
arrival of an unidentified flying object (a flying saucer-shaped
spacecraft) that entered Earth's atmosphere near Antarctica and
possibly crash-landed
- the setting was "Antarctica, Winter, 1982" - a
Norwegian (Norge) helicopter was seen tracking down
a Husky sled dog; seated next to the pilot (Norbert
Weisser) in the chopper, the
passenger-gunman (Larry Franco) was wildly firing his rifle at the
dog that raced across the snowbound landscape; the helicopter found
itself erratically flying above the
US National Science Institute research station in Antarctica (US Station
4, Outpost 31) near the South Pole
Husky Dog Targeted by Chopper
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The Passenger-Gunman on Helicopter Firing His Rifle at the Dog
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Weather-Beaten Wooden Sign at Antarctica Research Station
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- inside the Institute, a 12-person, all-male group
of researchers were relaxing in a recreation room, equipped with
a pinball machine, a ping-pong table, card table, jukebox, kitchen,
comfortable chairs and sofa, etc; in his own private elevated shack,
bearded, mid-30s R.J. MacReady (Kurt Russell) was drinking J&B
Scotch while playing a computer Chess Wizard game (with a female
electronic voice), and became disgruntled after being checkmated
- after the two Norwegians landed near the base, some of the researchers
came outside after hearing the noisy chopper; they watched as the
two Norwegians clumsily tried to destroy the Husky for no apparent
reason with their supply of grenades or by gunfire; one mis-tossed
grenade landed near the chopper and exploded, accidentally killing
the pilot and blowing up the helicopter
The Helicopter Was Accidentally Blown Up with an
Errant Grenade, Killing the Pilot
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The Gunman Warning the Researchers to Keep Away From the Dog
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Station Manager Garry's (Donald Moffat) Elimination of the Shooter
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- as the dog jumped up into the arms of the researchers
and happily licked them, the crazed gunman-passenger yelled out
an unheeded warning (in Norwegian): "Get the hell away! That's
not a dog, it's some sort of thing! It's
imitating a dog, it isn't real! GET AWAY, YOU IDIOTS!"; he took
aim at the group and the dog, and clumsily shot and injured meterologist
George Bennings (Peter Maloney) in the left leg (near his kneecap);
from inside the Institute, station manager-commander Garry
(Donald Moffat) shot back with a .357 Magnum through a broken windowpane
and killed the shooter with a bullet to the head; some of the Institute's
crew rushed to the burning chopper with fire extinguishers, as dog
handler Clark (Richard Masur) greeted and approached the Husky dog;
at the burning remains of the chopper, MacReady noted to Garry: "First
god-damn week of winter"; later once the flames died down, MacReady
reported that 15 cans of kerosene on board the chopper
had intensified the fire
- as the US camp's physician Dr. Copper (Richard Dysart)
treated Bennings' leg wound with four stitches, he hypothesized that
the two dead Norwegians must have been suffering from "cabin
fever" and had become crazed as they hunted down the Husky dog; frustrated
radio operator Windows (Thomas Waites) was unable to transmit a
report about the harrowing incident to the outside world; he complained
to senior biologist Blair (A. Wilford Brimley) that his radio communications
had been down for a full two weeks
- other minor crew members were introduced: young
black cook Nauls (T.K. Carter) who asked: "Maybe we at war with
Norway," while novice pilot and ass't mechanic Palmer (David Clennon)
chided Garry for killing the Norwegian: "Was wondering when 'El
Capitan' was going to get a chance to use his pop gun"
- after learning from assistant biologist Fuchs (Joel
Polis) that eight weeks earlier, the Norwegians had set up their
base camp as a 10-person science expedition, Bennings suggested investigating the camp that
was an hour's flight away, although he mentioned that the weather
might be a hindrance
- reluctant helicopter pilot R.J. MacReady and Dr.
Copper flew to the Norwegians' base camp, and after landing, they
found evidence throughout the devastated and empty complex
of extensive fires and debris, smoldering buildings, damaging explosions, and charred
and frozen corpses; they saw a red fire axe (with blood on it)
embedded in a blocked door leading to a communications room, where
one frozen dead man sitting in a chair with a straight-edged razor
in his limp hand had apparently committed suicide by slitting his
wrists and throat; Dr. Copper asked: "My God, what the hell happened
here?"; Dr. Copper gathered together a pile of research papers
and a portable video unit in a laboratory; in another section of
the building, MacReady found a partially-thawed, huge block of
ice (about 15 feet long and 4 feet tall) that
had been hollowed out and resembled a large bathtub; Copper
theorized: "Maybe they found a fossil, the remains of some animal buried
in the ice and they chopped it up, but where is it?"
Investigating the Destroyed and Desolate Norwegian
Base Camp
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Damaged, Smoldering Buildings
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Discovery of a Fire Axe (with Blood on It) Embedded
in Door
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The Frozen Corpse of Suicidal Victim With a Straight-Edged
Razor
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A Large Hollowed-Out Block of Ice
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Outside, Cans of Kerosene
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The Immolated Remains of a Deformed, Frozen Corpse
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- outside, behind the research station near cans of kerosene, they also discovered
the smoldering, charred and frozen corpse of a partly-formed,
mangled, two-headed half-mutant and half-humanoid: (Copper: "What
is that? Is that a man in there, or somethin'?" MacReady: "Whatever
it is, they burned it up in a hurry"); they returned to the US
Institute's base camp with the two frozen corpses, and some of the
base's videos and research papers
- upon their return, the entire crew examined the deformed, distorted, unidentifiable
and twisted body more thoroughly when laid out on a table; the
badly-charred corpse of the figure had a large disfigured head
(divided into two parts), strange appendages, and a ripped or split-open torso
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Close-Up of The Partly-Formed, Mangled, Two-Headed
Corpse Humanoid Creature
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- senior biologist Blair and Dr. Copper performed an autopsy on the two now-thawed corpses,
Dr. Copper examined the suicidal human cadaver to look for abnormalities,
but there were none: (Copper: "Nothing wrong with this one.
Physiologically, anyway. No drugs, no alcohol. Nothing"); Blair determined that the deformed corpse also had a normal set of internal organs
- at 7 pm that evening, Bennings ordered Clark to
lock up the Norwegians' Husky sled dog with
the US station's other sled dogs in the kennel; the other agitated
dogs reacted with barking as the dog's head split open
and was metamorphosized into a scary-looking, flesh-eating creature
sprouting twine-like tentacles and crab's legs before spraying
some of the other dogs with slime and consuming them; after
the team came to the rescue and began firing their rifles at the
snarling Creature, its head separated itself and stretched up toward
the ceiling; chief mechanic Childs (Keith David) was summoned by
MacReady to incinerate and torch the Creature's body with his flamethrower
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In the Dog Kennel, The Husky Sled Dog Was Transformed
Into a Flesh-Eating, Snarling Creature With Tentacles and Crab's
Legs - It Sprayed Other Dogs With Slime
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- the next morning, Blair conducted a second autopsy
on the corpse of the recently-charred sled-dog Husky-Creature and
concluded that it was a shape-shifting alien "Thing" -
a chameleon that could perfectly assimilate, digest (or dissolve)
and re-form itself into the shape of its victims (animal or human)
by imitating its image or identity: (Blair: "You see, what
we're talkin' about here is an organism that imitates other life-forms,
and it imitates 'em perfectly. When this thing attacked our dogs,
it tried to digest 'em, absorb them, and in the process shape
its own cells to imitate them. This for instance. That's not dog.
It's imitation. We got to it before it had time to finish...finish
imitating these dogs")
- after questioning Clark about the incident, Blair
learned that the Husky dog had been wandering around the camp until
the previous night; and Clark was alone with the Dog-creature for
over an hour before it was locked up in the kennel with the rest
of the dog pack; it was the beginning of the development of suspicions
and mistrust between the team's members
- the crew viewed a video taken of the Norwegians
at their remote dig site (the location of a UFO crash about 5-6
miles NE of their base); there as the Norwegian scientists formed
a circle around a large and deep crater, they used thermite explosives
to unearth an alien spacecraft buried deep under the ice
- MacReady and a few other team members, geologist
Norris (Charles Hallahan) and Palmer, traveled to the Norwegians'
remote excavation site; after rappelling down inside the large
crater, they had a closer look at the partially-buried alien UFO,
as Norris speculated that the spacecraft had possibly crash-landed
100,000 years earlier: ("I'd say the ice it's buried in is a hundred thousand years
old, at least"); MacReady added: "And those Norwegians
blew it up"; nearby at another smaller dig site, the Norwegians
appeared to have cut a large rectangular block
out of the ice that had since been hollowed out
- after returning to the base, the crew gathered in
the Rec Room to examine metal pieces of the spacecraft; MacReady
thought outloud about how an alien-Thing Creature had emerged
from the alien craft, but had presumably frozen to death in the
ice: ("Thousands of years ago it crashes, and this Thing gets thrown
out, or crawls out, and it ends up freezing in the ice");
Childs expressed his skepticism to Palmer and MacReady, calling
it "Voodoo Bulls--t"; Palmer joked: "Happens all the time, man. They're
falling out of the skies like flies. Government knows all about it,
right Mac?"; Palmer also continued: "Chariots of the Gods, man. They
practically own South America. I mean, they taught the Incas everything they know"
- Garry described his own theory about the block of
ice: "The Norwegians get ahold of this, and they dig it up out of the ice";
MacReady finished his thought about how the alien-Thing
Creature was dug out of the ice and brought back to
the Norwegian camp, where it thawed out and attacked the researchers: "They
dig it up. They cart it back, it gets thawed out, it wakes up,
probably not in the best of moods"
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Blair's Computer Simulation of the Dog-Creature
Showing the Assimilation Process
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- Blair privately ran a computer test simulation of
the cellular assimilation process, and determined that the Dog-Thing
creature had clearly absorbed and mimicked its victims; in
his autopsy notes, Blair described how cellular activity in the dog's
remains was still present and alive; he fearfully worried (with increasing
paranoia) that if the virulent alien-Thing ever escaped to civilized
areas, it would quickly assimilate all of life on Earth in only
a few years; Blair estimated that the entire world could be infected in only 27,000 hours
(about 3 years)
- to reduce further infections or assimilations, Dr.
Copper requested that the two sets of remains (the deformed humanoid
and dog-creature from the Norwegian base) be locked up in a storeroom;
as Windows and Bennings prepared the room, Bennings turned away
from the mutant-humanoid under a blanket and didn't notice that it moved
- in the privacy of a Skidozer 301 tractor's cab outside,
Fuchs expressed his worries to MacReady about the increasingly-crazed
senior biologist Blair, who had locked himself
away in an isolated toolshed room and refused to answer his
door; Fuchs shared some of his suspicions with MacReady by reading
Blair's disturbing notes about the chameleon-like nature
of the Thing and its latent cellular activity: ("It could have
imitated a million life forms on a million planets. It could change
to any one of them at any time. Now, it wants
life-forms on Earth....it needs to be alone and in close proximity
with the life-form to be absorbed. The chameleon strikes in the
dark....There is still cellular activity in these burned remains.
They're not dead yet!")
- slightly later after returning to the storeroom,
Windows was horrified to observe that Bennings had become absorbed
and/or assimilated after being wrapped up by the tentacles of the Creature's
remains under the blanket; he ran to notify MacReady and Windows
of the threat, who raced back to the storeroom; they realized that Bennings
had broken through an exterior window and was running away into
the snowy landscape; while pursuing after Bennings to corner him, the
crew discovered that he was a half-changed mutant-Creature (with
misshapened, arachnid-like arms); as Bennings was surrounded by
a circle of the crew, he bellowed and wailed back at them;
MacReady incinerated him by overturning a large canister of fuel and igniting
everything
The Demise of Meterologist Bennings - Turned Into
a Half Mutant After Prolonged Contact With the Thing-Creature
Under a Blanket in the Storeroom
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Tentacles of Thing-Creature Wrapped Around Bennings
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Bennings With Mutant Hands Bellowing at the Crew Surrounding Him
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Bennings Incinerated After Being Encircled by the Crew
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- MacReady explained to doubting station commander
Garry: "It was one of those things out there trying to imitate
him, Garry"; and then MacReady hurriedly left to also incinerate
the remains of both the Thing-creature and the Dog-creature in
a snow-pit filled with flammable fuel
- afterwards, MacReady realized that Blair, who had
disappeared, was suffering from a nervous breakdown and was possibly
infected; he had gone beserk and was on a rampage to prevent
anyone's escape from the base; there were signs that he had mangled
and destroyed the base's helicopter controls with a fire axe;
he then assaulted Windows, locked himself inside the radio room
in the main compound, and was smashing the radio and communications
equipment with his axe, while yelling out: "Nobody gets in or out
of here, nobody!"; Blair threatened to shoot and kill anyone
who interfered with him; Childs also reported that Blair had disabled
a second chopper and the tractor, and killed the rest of the surviving sled-dogs
- the crew was finally able to disarm, subdue, and
detain Blair, and lock him up in the toolshed away from the main
compound, where Dr. Copper heavily sedated him with an injection;
Blair blurted out: "I don't know who to trust" - one of the film's
main themes; MacReady responded: "Know what you mean, Blair. Trust
is a tough thing to come by these days. I'll tell ya what. Why
don't you just trust in the Lord"; Blair warned MacReady: "Watch
Clark...I said: 'Watch Clark' - and watch him close, do you hear me?"
- MacReady summarized the threat that their isolated
camp now faced: "Somebody in this camp ain't what he appears to
be. Right now that may be one or two of us. By spring, it could
be all of us"; Childs reiterated the group's main dilemma: "So
how do we know who's human? If I was an imitation, a perfect imitation,
how would you know if it was really me?"; Childs' question prompted Dr.
Copper to suggest that they could 'smoke out' the infected alien
Creature with a blood serium test; a sample of each
person's blood would be mixed with uncontaminated clean blood held
in lab storage: ("I suppose if there's a reaction, we'll know who
isn't human"); MacReady passed on Blair's suspicions about Clark:
"Keep an eye on Clark. He was close to that dog"
- distrust further intensified when it was discovered
that the supply of blood plasma bags in the infirmary's locked
refrigerator had been sabotaged; since the key lock was unbroken,
it was suspected that either Dr. Copper or Garry had used a key
to access the stored blood and destroy it; after a tense stand-off
between Windows and Garry who were both armed, the men clearly
had lost faith in Garry's leadership; he voluntarily relinquished
his gun and his command: ("I guess you'll all feel a little easier
if somebody else was in charge"), and the "even-tempered" MacReady
took charge as the team's 'de facto' leader
- MacReady decided to incinerate the
contaminated blood bags, as he told the crew what they were now
facing: "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"; meanwhile,
a major blizzard was predicted to hit the Antarctic area
- MacReady's first major decision was to have Garry,
Dr. Copper and suspected dog-handler Clark sedated (with shots
administered by Norris) and then kept under surveillance in the
Rec Room; in a private audio log entry, MacReady recorded his theory that the
Creature-Thing tore through its victim's clothing during the absorption
process: ("I think it rips through your clothes when it takes
you over. Windows found some shredded long johns, but the nametag
was missing. They could be anybody's. Nobody, nobody trusts anybody
now, and we're all very tired...There's nothing else I can do, just wait")
- as Fuchs continued his research,
he proposed a preventative antidote to MacReady: "If a small particle
of this Thing is enough to take over an entire organism, then everyone
should prepare their own meals, and I suggest we only eat out of
cans"; later, an unexpected black-out power failure
in the lab caused Fuchs to venture outside with a lighted flare,
where he found MacReady's shredded jacket in the snow; a few hours passed and Fuchs, who
had disappeared, was the subject of a search party; his
charred corpse was discovered by MacReady, Windows, and
Nauls; the three speculated that Fuchs had either burned himself to
death (to avoid assimilation), or had been incinerated by the Thing
- MacReady and Nauls continued on to MacReady's shack (to check on why his lights
were on); after almost an hour's delay in their return to the base,
the other suspicious crew members began to board up all of the
base's entry points; Nauls stumbled back into the base to report
to the rest of the team that he had become
suspicious of MacReady when he also found part of MacReady's shredded
green uniform in the shack; he told how he had abandoned
and stranded MacReady in the blinding blizzard by cutting his guide
line ("I cut him loose. He's one of 'em")
- as they debated MacReady's
possible assimilation and targeted him as the next Thing: (Windows:
"Do you think he's changed into one of those Things?"), MacReady
(with ice formed on his beard) spitefully returned to the
camp with a lighted flare and dynamite and was pounding on the
door to be let in - he threatened to blow up the camp: ("Anyone
messes with me -- and the whole camp goes")
- during the altercation and
stand-off, geologist Norris suffered a heart attack -- and as the
camp's physician Dr. Copper attempted to revive his heart with
resuscitation paddles and CPR on the infirmary's exam table, Norris'
mutated rib-cage/chest and stomach broke open; it became a fanged,
gaping maw with a bear-trap spring that bit off the doctor's forearms
(and he subsequently bled to death)
During Chest Defibrillation of Heart-Attack Victim
Norris, Both of Dr. Copper's Forearms Were Bitten Off by Norris'
Jaw-Like Abdomen
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- also, while Norris's body was being incinerated
by MacReady's flame-thrower, Norris transformed into a two-headed "Thing";
his 'spider head' separated from his body and reached up to the
overhanging ceiling vent, while the "head" from the body on the
table stretched until it separated and dropped to the floor, whipped
out a tentacle from its mouth, pulled itself along the floor, sprouted
spindly spider legs and eye stalks, and then scurried away like
a crab; Palmer exclaimed: "You gotta be f--kin' kidding" -
MacReady was able to destroy both of the heads with his flamethrower
The Transformation of Norris' Body Into a Two-Headed
'Thing' Before Both Heads Were Incinerated by MacReady With a Flamethrower
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- in the next very tense and shocking sequence,
MacReady ordered Windows and Palmer - at gunpoint, to force the
group's members to sit together while tied by heavy rope in chairs;
Clark resisted the test and lunged at MacReady
to stab and attack him with a scalpel - and was shot dead point-blank
in the forehead; the lifeless bodies of Clark and Dr. Copper were
laid on the top of the pool table by Palmer; then, in the Rec Room,
MacReady described the blood serum test and procedure that he would
use for each person's sample of blood, acquired by having each person's
thumb sliced open with a silver scalpel to draw blood; the sample
of blood would then be placed into a small glass petri dish or plate
(marked with a name) to be tested with a heated piece of copper wire
- MacReady described how each
life-form subject that was infected and transformed into the Thing
would try to independently defend itself if threatened: ("We're
gonna draw a little bit of everybody's blood. We're gonna find
out who's the Thing. Watching Norris in there gave me the idea
that maybe every part of him was a whole. Every little
piece is an individual animal with a built-in desire to protect
its own life. You see, when a man bleeds, it's just tissue. But blood
from one of you Things won't obey when it's attacked. It'll try
and survive, crawl away from a hot needle, say") - the
blood test would definitively reveal who had become assimilated,
and who had remained human
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With a Heated Piece of Copper Wire, MacReady Tested
Blood Serum Samples in a Petri Dish For Each Person - Palmer's
Sample Was the First to Indicate That He Was Infected
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- the first test of Windows' sample of blood turned
out to be negative; MacReady armed Windows with a flamethrower
to help keep control if any further tests revealed the Thing; MacReady
was also cleared after confidently testing himself: ("Now I'll
show you what I already know"); the deceased bodies of Dr. Copper
and Clark were tested next, and they were also found to
be uninfected and human
- when MacReady tested the blood of Palmer, the blood
sample in the petri dish recoiled and reacted violently indicating
that he was infected; seated iand bound in one of the chairs, the
victim's face exploded outward, and his body was propelled into
the ceiling tiles; when the body fell back down, its deformed head
split vertically to shockingly reveal an eyeless tentacled monster;
with its main tentacled mouth emerging from what was its head,
the tentacle whipped out and began to strangle and hold onto Windows'
neck and pull him forward to maul and massacre him head-first;
the Creature-Thing was finally incinerated by MacReady's flame thrower; the burning
creature smashed through the outer wall and fell into the snow,
where MacReady blew up its remains with a stick of dynamite
- and then, because Windows had been infected and
was starting to transform, MacReady torched Windows with another
flame thrower; Nauls, Childs, and Garry were also tested and cleared;
the only one remaining to be tested was Blair, who had earlier been
locked into the tool shed and sedated
- with Childs remaining in the base camp, the rest
of the uninfected group led by MacReady proceeded to the locked
tool shed to find Blair; there, they realized that Blair had escaped
and tunneled under the ice through loose floorboards, and had been
gathering other vehicle components (from the disabled helicopters
and tractor) to construct a small but crude metallic spacecraft
in an underground cave; while preparing to destroy the 'flying
saucer,' they were confused to see Childs running off from the
base into the blizzard: (Garry: "What's he doing outside?")
- and then, when the lights went out, MacReady
theorized that the Thing creature (Blair) had blown up the base's
power generator with plans to freeze the camp and its inhabitants
(including itself as a hibernating, frozen Creature); the group
realized that Blair expected to be rescued
and transported away - to be thawed and exposed to the rest of
the world: ("It wants to freeze now. It's got no
way out of here. It just wants to go to sleep in the cold until
the rescue team finds it"); the flying
saucer in the underground cave was blown up first, and then charges
were set with explosive Molotov cocktails to blow up other areas of camp
- after entering the generator room, Garry notified
the two others:
"It's gone, MacReady!"; without the power generator,
the group decided that the only way to insure the camp's survival
was to annihilate the entire base by exploding it to smithereens
with dynamite - as the Norwegians had attempted; in
the camp's basement while preparing some dynamite charges, Blair
approached Garry and forced his fingers under his face, and then
dragged Garry away; Nauls also wandered off, disappeared and was
never seen again; MacReady and Childs (now missing) were the only
two left
- MacReady was confronted by a monstrous,
snarling, big-toothed creature - it was Blair who now appeared Godzilla-like
from under the ground (and gave birth to another sled dog from
its abdomen); the Thing destroyed MacReady's dynamite detonator,
but MacReady was able to succeed in his mission (he hurled his
last stick of dynamite at the Creature, with parting words: "F--k
you too!"); the blast caused an explosive chain reaction of destruction that
completely obliterated the camp's station
Blair Transformed Into a Monstrous Big-Toothed Thing-Creature
From Under the Ground
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A Snarling Sled-Dog Emerged or Was "Birthed" From
The Creature-Thing's Abdomen
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- as MacReady was reeling from the aftermath of the
explosions, covered in a blanket and carrying a bottle of J&B Scotch
over to his ruined shack where he sat outside amidst the fires,
Childs suddenly appeared and asked: "Are you the only one who made
it?...Did you kill it?"; MacReady asked: "Where were you, Childs?";
he claimed he had become lost in the storm during his pursuit of
Blair: "When I saw Blair, I went out after him. Got lost in the
storm. Fire's got the temperature up all over the camp. Won't last
long though"; MacReady bluntly responded: "Neither will we"; when
Childs asked: "How will we make it?" MacReady told him: "Maybe
we shouldn't... If we've got any surprises for each other, I don't
think we're in much shape to do anything about it"; they
pondered how powerless they would be if one of them turned out
to be "THE THING"; however, if they both died, their deaths would prevent the infection
from spreading to others; then, Childs asked: "Well, what do we
do?", MacReady supplied the film's last line: "Why
don't we just wait here for a little while, see what happens?"
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MacReady to Childs: "Why don't we just
wait here for a little while, see what happens?"
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- in the film's deliberately-ambiguous
ending set outside MacReady's ruined shack, the two sat
and shared MacReady's bottle of Scotch as they
discussed how futile survival was (if they continued to warily
distrust each other) and how, in any case, they probably wouldn't
make it anyway, due to the frigid temperatures and their dire circumstances
- [Note: in an alternate, nihilistic ending, both
MacReady and Childs were transformed into the "Thing" (mimicking
a sled dog again), that looked back at the burning camp at dawn
before continuing on into the snowy Antarctic wilderness.]
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The 12 Person All-Male US Institute's Crew:
Heroic Loner R. J. MacReady (Kurt Russell) Drinking J&B Scotch and
Playing Computer Chess
The Institute's Lead Commander Garry (Donald Moffat)
Dog Handler Clark (Richard Masur)
Skilled Dr. Copper (Richard Dysart)
Injured Red Haired Meterologist George Bennings (Peter Maloney)
Radio Operator Windows (Thomas Waites) Unable to Report the Incident -
With Downed Equipment for Two Weeks
Senior Biologist Blair (A. Wilford Brimley)
Cool and Young African-American Cook Nauls (T. K. Carter)
Pot-Smoking, Sassy Assistant Mechanic Palmer (David Clennon)
Assistant Biologist Fuchs (Joel Polis)
Chief Mechanic Childs (Keith David)
Geologist Norris (Charles Hallahan)
The Half-Mutant and Half-Humanoid Found
In the Norwegian Base Camp and Brought Back to the US Camp
Blair's Diagnosis After an Autopsy of the Deformed Corpse's Internal Set
of Organs - They Were Normal
Childs Torching the Dog-Creature In the Kennel With a Flamethrower
Blair Dissecting the Protoplasmic Mass of the Dog-Creature
At the Norwegians' Remote Dig Site - A Crater with a Partially-Unearthed
Alien Ship
A Second Dig Site Nearby - a Rectangular Block of Ice Was Cut Out
Picture of the Norwegians With the Block of Ice
Blair's Fears That Team Members (and Then
'Civilized Areas') Would Be Next to Be Infected and Assimilated
The Remains of the Thing-Creature and the Dog-Creature Torched With a Flamethrower
in a Snow-Pit
Blair After His Rampage, and Heavily Sedated: "I don't know who to
trust"
A View of the Sabotaged Blood Supply in the Base Camp's Refrigerator Unit
The Newly-Appointed Leader MacReady Describing the Threat: ("If it takes
us over, then it has no more enemies, nobody left to kill it. And then
it's won")
MacReady's Shredded Jacket Found in the Snow by Fuchs
Fuchs' Charred Corpse in the Snow
Naul's Discovery of MacReady's Torn Green Uniform
MacReady's Threat: "Anyone messes with me -- and the whole camp
goes"
Clark Shot Dead in the Forehead As He Lunged at MacReady with a Scalpel
to Stab Him
The Two Deceased Bodies of Clark and Dr. Copper
Palmer's Head Split Vertically With an Emerging Tentacle
To Strangle Windows
Windows' Face Was Pulled Head-first Into the Split Head/Mouth
of the Thing (Palmer)
Thing-Palmer Incinerated by MacReady
Infected Windows Also Torched by MacReady
Underground Tunnel Used by Blair to Escape From Toolshed
Discovery of a Large Spacecraft Being Built by Blair
MacReady's Theory About Blair's Plans to Freeze Everyone
MacReady Blowing Up the Camp With Molotov Cocktails
Garry Forcing His Fingers Under Blair's Face to Suffocate and Kill Him
A Chain-Reaction of Explosions, Obliterating the Camp
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