director
John Carpenter
screenwriter
Bill Lancaster
based
on the story "Who Goes There?" by
John W. Campbell Jr.
producers
David Foster
Lawrence Turman
cinematographer
Dean Cundey
music
Ennio Morricone
editor
Todd Ramsay
cast
Kurt Russell (R.J. MacReady)
Wilford Brimley (Blair)
T.K. Carter (Nauls)
David Clennon (Palmer)
Keith David (Childs)
Richard A. Dysart (Copper)
Charles Hallahan (Norris)
Peter Maloney (Bennings)
Richard Masur (Clark)
Donald Moffat (Garry)
Joel Polis (Fuchs)
Thomas G. Waites (Windows)
mpaa rating: R
running
time: 109m
u.s.
release: June 25, 1982
video
availability: VHS -
DVD
outpost
#31 (cool fan site)
other john
carpenter films
reviewed on this website:
- escape
from l.a.
- escape
from new york
- ghosts
of mars
- halloween
- vampires
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"There are times
when we seem to be sticking our heads
right down into the bloody, stinking maw of the unknown...
Basically just a geek show, a gross-out movie..."
- Roger Ebert
"...It is so bloody
and horrible that it is more disgusting
and disgraceful than it is frightening..."
- Rex Reed
"Thoroughly disgusting...Not
for anyone, particularly children."
- Lynn Minton, Movie Guide for Puzzled Parents
Yup. The nation's critics were
still floating in the warm bath of Steven Spielberg's E.T.,
with its reassurance that aliens were froggy, friendly folk who
enjoyed Reese's Pieces, when John Carpenter farted at the hug-fest.
The fart was called The Thing, and it was treated -- by
disinterested audiences as well as appalled critics -- very much
like a room-clearing ass bomb. Now, I love E.T., but there's
always room for its antithesis. And Carpenter's paranoid classic
-- one of his best, easily up there with Halloween -- had to wait until video
and cable, and finally a densely packed DVD, to get its full
due. Those who compared it to Howard Hawks' colloquial 1952 version
of John W. Campbell's novella missed the mark: Carpenter's Thing
is more like what might've happened if John Ford had adapted
Lovecraft. Carpenter and special-effects wizard Rob Bottin (only
in his early twenties at the time) actually did what Lovecraft
was always alluding to -- they visualized the unspeakable, imagined
the unimaginable.
Kurt Russell, in the third
of five movies with Carpenter, looks at first glance like a furrier
variation on Snake Plissken, the grim and surly anti-hero of
the Escape
from...
movies. "Cheating bitch," Russell's MacReady grunts
as he dumps a glass of ice into a chess computer. But MacReady
is probably the most conventional of Carpenter's heroes. In the
context of Outpost #13, he's the level head, the regular guy,
unimpressed but not unflappable. You know things are paranoid
around the base when the men suspect MacReady of being the shape-shifting
Thing (and, of course, there's been fan speculation that MacReady
is the Thing -- its most successful manifestation, willing
to freeze along with Childs at the end, knowing that someone
will arrive and dig it up sooner or later).
The Thing begins with a sequence unmatched by
anything else in Carpenter's work. Ominously bland shots of the
Antarctic profile, then a beautiful white-gray husky pursued
by manic Norwegians in a black helicopter. I like to view the
one with the rifle -- who approaches the men, shouting words
of warning they can't understand, and then opens fire on the
dog, wounding one of the men -- as the unlucky Norwegian version
of MacReady; I like to imagine this being the ironic end of a
Thing prequel, wherein the heroes chase the Thing to an
American military base after devastating losses at their own
base, and then, as in Night of the Living Dead, get blown
away for their troubles ... while the monster in its fuzzy, frisky
new form snuggles up to its fresh banquet of victims. End credits.
Now, that would be a killer Carpenter movie. (Many fans
thirst for a sequel; personally, I'd prefer the prequel.)
Some critics have complained
that the men at the outpost have no particular personalities,
and therefore it doesn't make much difference when the Thing
takes them over. It's an easy and tired shot to take. We are,
after all, picking these men up during a long tour of duty at
the ass end of Antarctica. They are generally bored and demoralized,
playing cards or ping-pong, getting stoned while watching old
tapes of game shows or porno. Until the Thing arrives, the men
don't seem to have much to do except kill time and, presumably,
count the days till they're out of there. It's supposed to be
a military outpost, but except for the rigid Garry (Donald Moffat)
this crew couldn't seem less military. They have more in common
with the scruffy screw-ups in Carpenter's feature debut Dark
Star than with the soldiers in the Hawks original.
And the men do have
personalities; aside from the aforementioned MacReady and Garry,
we have the deceptively dyspeptic Blair (Wilford Brimley), who
loses his shit and trashes a communications room; the roller-skating
Nauls (T.K. Carter), gliding around to the beat of Stevie Wonder
and complaining that someone left their nasty underwear in his
kitchen; Childs (Keith David), a skeptical bad-ass ("You
believe this voodoo bullshit?") closer in temperament to
MacReady than anyone else; Clark (Richard Masur), the big, bearded
dog handler, who gets my favorite line ("I dunno, but it's
weird and pissed off, whatever it is"); the affable Copper
(Richard Dysart), who sports a tiny nose ring (an odd thing for
a man his age to have in a 1982 movie); the soft and tentative
Norris (Charles Hallahan), who's "not up to" taking
charge; the stoner Palmer (David Clennon), who offers to take
MacReady up in the chopper but immediately gets dismissed ("Hey,
thanks for thinkin' about it, though"); the irritable Bennings
(Peter Maloney), who secures his status as a Carpenter character
by taking a chug of liquor while waiting for someone to tend
to his shot-up leg; the haunted-looking Windows (Thomas G. Waites),
seemingly driven around the bend because he's in charge of communications
and can't find anyone out there; and the bookish Fuchs (Joel
Polis), who suggests that the men start eating out of cans, raising
an image of the Thing disguised as a turkey leg and waiting patiently
to be ingested.
Maybe what the critics meant
is that the men aren't likable, or at least not in the
usual plastic Hollywood way. They're just guys doing a job. They're
not heroes, and with the possible exception of Kurt Russell they're
not fantasy material for teenage girls. No doubt about it, The
Thing -- like Halloween -- couldn't be made the same
way today. There isn't even a woman to provide romantic tension;
the film is pared down to the essentials: The Men and The Thing.
After a while, the movie takes on a clothesline structure --
one Thing sequence after another, until the apocalyptic finish.
Carpenter, aided by cinematographer Dean Cundey and editor Todd
Ramsay (to say nothing of creature-maker Bottin), stages each
Thing encounter with a master's eye for shock building on shock.
The first sequence, after the eerily calm husky is led into the
dog cages and left alone, is almost cruelly intense, emphasizing
the terrified helplessness of the dogs (one of which is seen
trying to chew its way through the cage). The centerpiece
of the film -- two bookend nightmares, the unfortunate defibrillation
attempt on Norris and the exquisitely drawn-out blood-test scene
-- contains everything you could want to know about horror filmmaking.
Bodies are torn apart and redesigned, men howl and scream to
echo their attacker, flailing limbs smash a lightbulb situated
far too high to be smashed by flailing limbs under normal circumstances
-- the chaos is electrifying.
It all leads to a typically
moody, ambiguous Carpenter ending; after MacReady has fed the
beast a generous helping of TNT (with the priceless sentiment
"Yeah, fuck you too"), he and Childs sit across
from each other in the lethal cold while the outpost burns behind
them. "If we have any surprises for each other," MacReady
sighs, "I don't think we're in much shape to do anything
about it." He's right. The survivors will almost certainly
freeze and die, but the threat has passed -- unless, of course,
particles from the burning Thing rise up with the thick smoke,
combine with clouds, and release themselves as raindrops over
a major city or three. Even if that doesn't strike you as a reasonable
possibility, The Thing doesn't leave you with much hope.
Carpenter usually doesn't. He's famous, after all, for the chilling
montage of houses at the end of Halloween -- places the
killer has been and could be again, all over the neighborhood.
Here, the neighborhood is Earth, with a lot more places -- and
people -- to hide in.
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