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each aiming to defeat the other through subterfuge and sabotage. [133] [134] |
In April 2023, it was announced that The Thing and characters from the film |
would be featured in the upcoming video game, Funko Fusion , set to be |
released in 2024. The game is set to include R.J. MacReady , Childs and Dr. |
Copper. [135] [136] In November 2023, it was announced that The Thing would be |
featured in the video game, Pinball M . The Thing Pinball, a table based on |
the film, was released on November 30, 2023. The table includes R.J. MacReady |
and various other elements from the film. [137] [138] Thematic analysis [ edit |
] The central theme of The Thing concerns paranoia and mistrust. [139] [140] |
[141] Fundamentally, the film is about the erosion of trust in a small |
community, [142] instigated by different forms of paranoia caused by the |
possibility of someone not being who they say they are, or that your best |
friend may be your enemy. [143] [141] It represents the distrust that humans |
always have for somebody else and the fear of betrayal by those we know and, |
ultimately, our bodies. [141] The theme remains timely because the subject of |
paranoia adapts to the age. The Thing focuses on being unable to trust one's |
peers, but this can be interpreted as distrust of entire institutions. [144] |
Developed in an era of cold-war tensions between the United States and the |
Soviet Union , the film refers to the threat of nuclear annihilation by |
mutually assured destruction . Diabolique ' s Daniel Clarkson Fisher notes |
that MacReady destroys the chess computer after being checkmated , and |
similarly vows to destroy the Thing, even at the expense of the team. [145] |
The Cold War-style isolationism hurts the group, while a lack of trust |
destroys it. Screen Rant ' s Michael Edward Taylor draws allusions between The |
Thing and the accusatory Red Scares and McCarthyism , as the film conveys an |
anti-communist fear of infection of civilized areas that will lead to |
assimilation and imitation. [140] [145] Slant Magazine ' s John Lingsan said |
the men display a level of post- Vietnam War (1955–1975) "fatigued |
counterculturalism" – the rejection of conventional social norms , each |
defined by their own eccentricities. [142] The work of writer H. P. Lovecraft |
was an inspiration for Carpenter's work. The shapeless, undefinable Thing has |
been compared to Lovecraft's indescribable, otherworldly forces. [146] The |
Atlantic ' s Noah Berlatsky said that unlike typical horror genre films, women |
are excluded, allowing the Thing to be identified as a fear of not being a |
man, or being homosexual. [139] Vice ' s Patrick Marlborough considered The |
Thing to be a "scathing examination" of manliness, noting that identifying the |
Thing requires intimacy, confession, and empathy to out the creature, but |
"male frailty" prevents this as an option. Trapped by pride and stunted |
emotional growth, the men are unable to confront the truth out of fear of |
embarrassment or exposure. [144] Berlatsky noted that MacReady avoids |
emotional attachments and is the most paranoid, allowing him to be the hero. |
This detachment works against him in the finale, which leaves MacReady locked |
in a futile mistrust with Childs, each not really knowing the other. [139] |
Nerdist 's Kyle Anderson and Strange Horizons ' s Orrin Grey analyzed The |
Thing as an example of author H. P. Lovecraft 's cosmic horror . [147] [146] |
Anderson's analysis includes the idea of cosmic horror in large part coming |
"from the fear of being overtaken," connecting it to Lovecraft's xenophobia |
and Blair's character arc of becoming what he most fears. In contrast, |
Anderson compares Blair to MacReady, who represents a more traditional |
Hollywood film protagonist. [147] Grey describes the creature as fear of the |
loss of self, using Blair's character as an example. Discussing The Thing in |
the context of the first of three films in Carpenter's " Apocalypse Trilogy ", |
Grey states the threat the monster poses to the world "is less disconcerting |
than the threat posed to the individual concept of self." [146] The Thing |
never speaks or gives a motive for its actions, and ruthlessly pursues its |
goal. [148] Den of Geek ' s Mark Harrison and Ryan Lambie said that the |
essence of humanity is free will, which is stripped away by the Thing, |
possibly without the individual being aware that they have been taken over. |
[149] [150] In a 1982 interview, when given the option to describe The Thing |
as "pro-science" like Who Goes There? or "anti-science" like The Thing from |
Another World , Carpenter chose "pro-human", stating, "It's better to be a |
human being than an imitation, or let ourselves be taken over by this creature |
who's not necessarily evil, but whose nature it is to simply imitate, like a |
chameleon." [70] Further allusions have been drawn between the blood-test |
scene and the epidemic of HIV at the time, which could be identified only by a |
blood test. [14] [151] Since its release, many theories have been developed to |
attempt to answer the film's ambiguous ending shared by MacReady and Childs. |
[152] Several suggest that Childs was infected, citing Dean Cundey's statement |
that he deliberately provided a subtle illumination to the eyes of uninfected |
characters, something absent from Childs. Similarly, others have noted a lack |
of visible breath from the character in the frigid air. While both aspects are |
present in MacReady, their absence in Childs has been explained as a technical |
issue with the filming. [153] [154] During production, Carpenter considered |
having MacReady be infected, [155] and an alternate ending showed MacReady |
having been rescued and definitively tested as uninfected. [52] Russell has |
said that analyzing the scene for clues is "missing the point". He continued, |
"[Carpenter] and I worked on the ending of that movie together a long time. We |
were both bringing the audience right back to square one. At the end of the |
day, that was the position these people were in. They just didn't know |
anything ... They didn't know if they knew who they were ... I love that, over |
the years, that movie has gotten its due because people were able to get past |
the horrificness of the monster ... to see what the movie was about, which was |
paranoia." [152] However, Carpenter has teased, "Now, I do know, in the end, |
who the Thing is, but I cannot tell you." [156] Legacy [ edit ] Retrospective |
reassessment [ edit ] In the years following its release, critics and fans |
have reevaluated The Thing as a milestone of the horror genre. [40] A |
prescient review by Peter Nicholls in 1992 called The Thing "a bleak, |
memorable film [that] may yet be seen as a classic". [157] It has been called |
one of the best films directed by Carpenter. [36] [158] [159] John Kenneth |
Muir called it "Carpenter's most accomplished and underrated directorial |
effort", [160] and critic Matt Zoller Seitz said it "is one of the greatest |
and most elegantly constructed B-movies ever made". [161] Trace Thurman |
described it as one of the best films ever, [162] and in 2008, Empire magazine |
selected it as one of The 500 Greatest Movies of All Time, [163] at number |
289, calling it "a peerless masterpiece of relentless suspense, retina- |
wrecking visual excess and outright, nihilistic terror". [55] It is now |
considered to be one of the greatest horror films ever made, [160] [164] and a |
classic of the genre. [165] Several publications have called it one of the |
best films of 1982, including Filmsite.org , [166] Film.com , [167] and |
Entertainment Weekly . [156] Muir called it "the best science fiction-horror |