The Thing prequel

ya ..sorry Art ..however it wasnt ADI's fault ..they did plan on having much more practical .but Alas ..they didnt produce the film
 
I love some of the comments on the interview page. It also shows part of the reason practical effects are dying, the studios want to pump movies out so fast you don't have time to build anything other than digitally.
 
Previewed it last night and Harry was to kind.

I had to stay up to watch Carpenter's to take the taste of ****e out of my mouth.

Man did this Movie suck!
 
I saw it today and thought it was pretty good. My only complaint was that there used too much CGI. Wish they would have used the original theme more too, that kinda sucked. Overall though if you don't go expecting it to be better than the first its a fun movie.
 
What does their Thing actually look like?

alf_l.jpg
 
Well, in the interview with the director he says that he envisioned it as not having a true form, that its more of a virus and takes over other lifeforms. Pretty much saying that the creature in the ice is just some other alien it took over.
 
Oh snap. Why do I do this to myself? I would have thought that I would have learned by now, never to go into a prequel with any type of high hopes.

A poor imitation of JC's Thing. Just average. I should have waited to rent this one.
 
Well, in the interview with the director he says that he envisioned it as not having a true form, that its more of a virus and takes over other lifeforms. Pretty much saying that the creature in the ice is just some other alien it took over.


That's kind of the way I always thought about it. When it thaws from the ice it looks like whatever thing it last assimilated.
 
I saw it. Not going to lie, but it's actually kind of.... ok? I didn't walk out of it hating it. I certainly didn't walk out of it loving it. And there were a lot of moments where my theories on how the Thing worked weren't contradicted.

Some say that the Thing in this movie doesn't act like the thing from Carpenter's version. I'm not totally convinced since the Thing in from that movie movie made a lot of questionable decisions like revealing itself through Norris when McReady has a flame thrower ready to go.

When I was watching the scene where the Thing reveals itself in the helicopter, one of my theories about how the Thing works came up again. What if the Thing NEEDS to assimilate in order to survive? Does it starve and die out if it doesn't assimilate? It's the only logical conclusion I can come up with that explains why the Norris thing came out when it could have just easily passed off as dead. Might also explain why it would want to freeze itself rather than wait till rescue arrives.
 
just came back from seeing it. I liked it. it wasn't perfect...but the direction was good and not over the top. The script could have used a few more new ideas. The Thing was good. Some of the close-ups revealed the snow to look like styrofoam cornflakes. i didn't feel the "ending" was satisfying enough, before they go into what we already know from the first film. It's a good popcorn flick and copanion peice to the orig. 6.5 outta 10.
 
I saw it and pretty much got what I expected... an hour and a half escape with a few shocks and scares along the way. It was pretty straight forward and if you saw the original... well, you saw a pretty good blueprint of what this movie is.

Like Jeyl said, it was ok... you don't hate, you don't love it. Although, he has a lot more thought about it (the new one and the original) than I do. I didn't try to link the two movies too much (in all honesty, it's been a long time since I've seen the original all the way through - I did try to watch it a month or so ago but fell asleep watching due to working the night the before).

I do remember the original being a lot more tense and scary than this one. But, I am older... and well, things just don't scare me as easy anymore.
 
Some say that the Thing in this movie doesn't act like the thing from Carpenter's version. I'm not totally convinced since the Thing in from that movie movie made a lot of questionable decisions like revealing itself through Norris when McReady has a flame thrower ready to go.

It could be possible that the reason why the Thing in the prequel isn't doing some of the actions we've seen in Carpenter's Thing is because the events at the Norwegian camp was the first encounter it had with any human beings, ever. Since the Thing continues to retain memories, it's possible that it learned what it did wrong and became more cautious when it came across Outpost #31 (which explains why it waited hours until it was locked alone with the dogs at Outpost #31 before it attempted to assimilate any living creatures in Carpenter's film: because it learned that a straightforward assimilation didn't work as well when it came to humans). I'm just tossing that out there, as I haven't seen the film yet. But it makes sense in continuity wise.
 
I saw it. Not going to lie, but it's actually kind of.... ok? I didn't walk out of it hating it. I certainly didn't walk out of it loving it. And there were a lot of moments where my theories on how the Thing worked weren't contradicted.

Some say that the Thing in this movie doesn't act like the thing from Carpenter's version. I'm not totally convinced since the Thing in from that movie movie made a lot of questionable decisions like revealing itself through Norris when McReady has a flame thrower ready to go.

When I was watching the scene where the Thing reveals itself in the helicopter, one of my theories about how the Thing works came up again. What if the Thing NEEDS to assimilate in order to survive? Does it starve and die out if it doesn't assimilate? It's the only logical conclusion I can come up with that explains why the Norris thing came out when it could have just easily passed off as dead. Might also explain why it would want to freeze itself rather than wait till rescue arrives.

My theory on the Noris thing is that it didn't handle being electrocuted to well. Theres not much that takes an electric jolt to the face too well so My guess is that it was attempting to defend itself at that point
 
I concur. It did not suck. Funny thing though... Not only did it tie into the original perfectly, it still left itself open for a sequel. Crazy.
 
The original (82) version is one of my top 10 films and I really liked this prequel. They did a great job with it, even the small details like the axe stuck in the wall the Mac ducks past in the original you get to see get stuck into the wall here chopping a thing piece up. It was those little details that only really matter to fans of the original that I appreciated. Hard to make a film connect to such an old and much loved movie as the original 82 version, I think they did the best job they could have, and really like it.:thumbsup
 
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