The Thing: Collector’s Edition DVD, starring Kurt
Russell
Directed by John Carpenter
Review by Wayne C. Rogers
I picked up a fairly new copy of the DVD for John
Carpenter’s The Thing: Collector’s Edition, which was released in 2004, last
week for a couple of bucks. The movie
itself came out on June 25th, 1982. That
was the summer filled with blockbusters, or at least great movies: Blade
Runner, E.T., Poltergeist, and John Carpenter’s The Thing.
I’d already read John
W. Campbell’s short story, Who Goes There, several years before the Carpenter
movie came out and had also seen the original 1951 film, The Thing From Another
World, that was directed by Howard Hawks and starred James Arness as the
creature.
John Carpenter’s The Thing also blew me out of my seat. The special effects for the creature were
awesome, and the actors had me believing I was right there with them at the
Antarctic research station, trapped in a snow blizzard with the Thing coming
after my sorry ass.
Anyway, when I purchased the DVD I hadn’t seen the movie
since it had been out in the VHS format, which was at least fifteen years. I also saw that this particular edition of
the film had an 80-minute behind-the-scenes documentary, and I wanted to see it. That's what caused me to buy it on DVD.
For those of you who don’t know the movie, it’s about a
group of American scientists and a
helicopter pilot who find themselves stranded at an Antarctic research station
during a snow storm. What creates the
tension for this movie is that a very aggressive alien is also at the station
with them. The alien and its space craft
were discovered by a Norwegian station several miles away. The alien wiped out everybody there, except
for two men who chased it in the form of a dog across the snow to the American
station. The two Norwegians die, and
then the Americans take the animal in, not knowing a pissed off alien is inside
of it.
I mean the alien was frozen in the snow for like 70,000
years, so it was a little cranky when the Norwegians thawed it out.
The alien is a shape changer and can take any form it
desires. So, it doesn't take long before
the scientists realize the alien is amongst them. They just don't know who's real or who's an
alien. In other words, they know whom to
trust. The film is therefore filled with
a strong sense of claustrophobia and distrust, not to mention violence when the
alien rags on someone. To add to the
utter sense of isolation is a great musical score by Ennio Morricone that’s
both haunting in nature and adds to the sense of loneliness at the research
station.
Besides Kurt Russell who plays the helicopter pilot,
MacReady, John Carpenter was able to assemble a strong cast of secondary actors
who brought their superb skills to the set and delivered performances that were
Oscar worthy. You have Wilford Brimley
(before he grew his white mustache) as Blair, Keith David (Platoon, Marked For
Death, Pitch Black) as Childs, Donald Moffat as Garry, Richard Masur as Clark,
and Charles Hallahan as Norris, whose head rips off during the movie, falls to
the floor, develops crab-like legs, and then scuttles hurryingly out of the
room, hoping to escape the flame thrower.
The great Stan Winston did the creature/dog special effects
as a favor to Robb Bottin (The Howling, The Fog and Robocop), who was busy
doing the special effects for the rest of the movie. In many ways, this was Robb’s picture because
without his special effects, it would’ve been just a good film, instead of a
great one. His creatures (remember, this
was pre-CGI) took special effects to the next level with their awe-inspiring
believability and astounding gruesomeness.
Though a lot of the movie was filmed on sound stages with
the temperature turned down, much was also filmed in Stewart, British Columbia
because of the snow there. Though it was
a grueling shoot, the actors loved it and felt it made their character’s
reactions more real to the audience.
The Thing was John Carpenter’s first big studio project, and
everyone was expecting great things from it at the Box Office. When it didn’t happen, it was a letdown for
all involved as they tried to figure out what went wrong. Of course, the movie has since become a
classic and has sold a ton of DVDs to its legion of fans.
I need to point out that the screenplay was written by Bill
Lancaster, who is the son of the late Burt Lancaster, and who had written The
Bad News Bears. He gave the film its
foundation, and then it was up to the cast and crew to bring the movie to life.
The Collector’s Edition of this DVD has a great documentary
that’s nearly an hour-and-a-half long and tells you everything you need to know
about the making of the movie and about its after affects. There's also a look at the production design,
some other special effects, and trailers.
This is a great horror movie that still holds up well after
thirty years with special effects that will knock you right out of your little
white cotton bobby socks. It’s good that
the movie has finally found its audience and the deserved recognition for such
fine directing, acting and mind-blowing special effects. The Thing is a true classic in every sense of
the word and a fantastic movie to watch on Halloween night!
Wayne C. Rogers is a Las Vegas casino employee who has been writing professionally (with the intent to sell) for twenty-five years. It's only been within the past three years that Mr. Rogers (no, not the famous TV host of programs for children) made the decision to work towards being a full-time writer of horror, suspense, psychological, and erotic horror fiction.
He has written several novellas (three of which are posted on Amazon's Kindle), dozens of short stories (some of which are also on Amazon), an erotic/horror novel--The House of Blood--for the wild crowd that lives on the kinky side of reality, and five completed screenplays based on his stories The Encounter, The Tunnels, A Step in the Shadows, Trick or Treat, and The Garbage Disposal (the last three are short screenplays). He is currently at work on a sixth screenplay, The Code of Honor, as well as a seventh, Dolan. During the year of 2012, Mr. Rogers sold over twenty short stories with some of them appearing in the paperback anthologies: I'll Never Go Away, Grindhouse and Peep Show, Volume 2.
Being somewhat of a couch potato at his old age of sixty-two, Mr. Rogers enjoys the pastime of writing, reading (he has over a few hundred books stored in boxes a few feet from his writing table), great movies from any time period, and well-made television programs such as Justified, Mad Men, Breaking Bad, The Game of Thrones, Justified, and American Horror Story. Finally, Mr. Rogers is rather unusual in that he doesn't own a house or a car, A friend just recently bought him a cellphone, but he hasn't turned it on as of yet. He spends his free time at the computer writing his stories, and usually doesn't leave his apartment till it's time to head to work. Thank God for ham & cheese sandwiches and chicken noodle soup!!!
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