Flashback: John Carpenter’s ‘The Thing’ (1982) inspired a generation of filmmakers
John Carpenter’s 1982 science fiction monster movie The Thing is less a remake of Howard Hawks’ 1951 film than a more faithful adaptation of the original 1938 John W. Campbell Jr. story “Who Goes There?” The film stars Kurt Russell, with Keith David, Richard Dysart, and Wilford Brimley, among others. The Thing is known for its special effects, provided by a team of more than 40 technicians, including veteran creature-effects artists Stan Winston and Rob Bottin.
While the film opened to poor box office, but over the years it has grown into a classic. Along with Ridley Scott’s 1979 SF horror movie Alien, The Thing inspired a generation of filmmakers—and spawned games, comic books, a haunted house attraction, and a 2011 prequel film.
In 2020, it was reported that Universal Pictures and Blumhouse are partnering for a new version, this time adapting a longer version of the original story.
Buy the movie on Amazon (affilliate link)
originally published April 17, 2020
RELATED LINKS
[Flashback] Alien (1979)—Ripley Was Supposed To Be This Instead
Terror in Space: 16 Horror Movies Set In Outer Space
Star Trek Panel: How Nichelle Nichols Changed NASA
Flashback: PLANET OF THE VAMPIRES (1965)
Quiz: Was That Episode On Twilight Zone or Outer Limits?
5 Things You Might Not Know About John Carpenter's ‘The Thing’ (IndieWire)
How John Carpenter's The Thing went from D-list trash to horror classic (SYFY)
John Carpenter's The Thing: 10 Behind-The-Scenes Facts About The Kurt Russell Horror Movie (CinemaBlend)
John Carpenter's Sci-Fi Horror Film 'The Thing' Was Ahead Of Its Time (WBUR)
How John Carpenter’s The Thing became a horror/sci-fi classic (Little White Lies)
Why John Carpenter's The Thing Originally Received Such Bad Reviews (Screen Rant)
John Carpenter’s The Thing Had An Icy Critical Reception (Den of Geek)
‘The Thing’ Reboot in Early Development With Blumhouse, John Carpenter (Variety)
John Carpenter confirms involvement with ‘The Thing’ reboot (NME)