Based on the novella “Who Goes There?” by John W. Campbell the
setup involves an isolated group of scientists and military personnel stationed
at the north pole who investigate a peculiar object that dropped out of the sky
near them. Turns out to be a flying
saucer. They accidentally blow up the
ship when they attempt to recover it using thermite (oops!) but take the consolation
prize of an otherworldly beast encased in ice back to their base. They want to keep the thing frozen until the
higher ups arrive and decide what to do with it. Another accident occurs when one of the guys
guarding the ice block unknowingly places an electric blanket on top thawing it
enough to let the organism out. It’s
hostile and ping pongs between attacking everyone and hiding out in and around
the encampment.
Part of what makes this villain so creepy is that whenever
it does show up it comes in fast and hard.
These quick bursts of action only last a couple of moments but they’re
intense because they rev up the scene from 0 to 100 in a snap. Of course the standout attack is when the
alien busts through a door out of nowhere and our protagonists act immediately
to set the thing on fire. It’s an iconic
visual and well deserved because fuck me did it look dangerous as all hell to
perform. I mean the actors are throwing
buckets of flammable material onto a stunt guy in a suit who’s already on fire
creating massive bursts of flames on top of flames. The surrounding set and props all catch fire
as well.
It can’t be overstated how influential The Thing from
Another World was. It frightened the
pants off and inspired a whole generation of filmmakers. You can see its legacy in Alien, Aliens
(the alien motion tracker is very reminiscent of the Geiger counter here that
shows how close the creature is), slashers in general (I wouldn’t classify this
as a slasher exactly but it certainly has elements of one) and of course, John
Carpenter’s impeccable remake.
Boy did it take me a long time to finally get to this one
and it’s a fun time overall. However, I’m
not saying it’s a totally incredible movie.
It’s extremely dialogue heavy, has smarmy characters and the creature
design is more or less a lazy Frankenstein knock off instead of the shape
shifter from the book. But that was the
style of the time and as long as you understand that going in you’ll be ok. For any big horror fan it’s required reading
because its influence looms large to this day.
You can trace a bunch of your favorite films and tropes back to this
guy.
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