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form that assimilates, then imitates, other organisms. The group is overcome
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by paranoia and conflict as they learn that they can no longer trust each
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other and that any of them could be the Thing. The film stars Kurt Russell as
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the team's helicopter pilot R.J. MacReady , with A. Wilford Brimley , T. K.
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Carter , David Clennon , Keith David , Richard Dysart , Charles Hallahan ,
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Peter Maloney , Richard Masur , Donald Moffat , Joel Polis , and Thomas G.
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Waites in supporting roles. Production began in the mid-1970s as a faithful
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adaptation of the novella, following 1951's The Thing from Another World . The
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Thing went through several directors and writers, each with different ideas on
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how to approach the story. Filming lasted roughly twelve weeks, beginning in
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August 1981, and took place on refrigerated sets in Los Angeles as well as in
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Juneau, Alaska , and Stewart, British Columbia . Of the film's $15 million
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budget, $1.5 million was spent on Rob Bottin 's creature effects, a mixture of
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chemicals, food products, rubber, and mechanical parts turned by his large
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team into an alien capable of taking on any form. The Thing was released in
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1982 to negative reviews that described it as "instant junk" and "a wretched
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excess". Critics both praised the special effects achievements and criticized
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their visual repulsiveness, while others found the characterization poorly
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realized. The film grossed $19.6 million during its theatrical run. Many
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reasons have been cited for its failure to impress audiences: competition from
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films such as E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial , which offered an optimistic take on
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alien visitation; a summer that had been filled with successful science
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fiction and fantasy films; and an audience living through a recession ,
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diametrically opposed to The Thing ' s nihilistic and bleak tone. The film
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found an audience when released on home video and television. In the
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subsequent years, it has been reappraised as one of the best science fiction
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and horror films ever made and has gained a cult following . Filmmakers have
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noted its influence on their work, and it has been referred to in other media
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such as television and video games. The Thing has spawned a variety of
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merchandise – including a 1982 novelization, "haunted house" attractions,
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board games – and sequels in comic books, a video game of the same title , and
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a 2011 prequel film of the same title . Plot [ edit ] In Antarctica , a
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Norwegian helicopter pursues a sled dog to an American research station. The
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Americans witness the passenger accidentally blow up the helicopter and
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himself. The pilot fires a rifle and shouts at the Americans, but they cannot
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understand him and he is shot dead in self-defense by station commander Garry.
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The American helicopter pilot, R.J. MacReady , and Dr. Copper leave to
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investigate the Norwegian base. Among the charred ruins and frozen corpses,
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they find the burnt corpse of a malformed humanoid, which they transfer to the
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American station. Their biologist, Blair, autopsies the remains and finds a
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normal set of human organs. Clark kennels the sled dog, and it soon
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metamorphoses and absorbs several of the station dogs. This disturbance alerts
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the team, and Childs uses a flamethrower to incinerate the creature. Blair
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autopsies the Dog-Thing and surmises it is an organism that can perfectly
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imitate other life-forms. Data recovered from the Norwegian base leads the
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Americans to a large excavation site containing a partially buried alien
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spacecraft, which Norris estimates has been buried for over a hundred thousand
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years, and a smaller, human-sized dig site. Blair grows paranoid after running
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a computer simulation that indicates the creature could assimilate all life on
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Earth in a matter of years. The group implements controls to reduce the risk
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of assimilation. The remains of the malformed humanoid assimilate an isolated
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Bennings, but Windows interrupts the process and MacReady burns the Bennings-
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Thing. The team also imprisons Blair in a tool shed after he sabotages all the
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vehicles, kills the remaining sled dogs, and destroys the radio to prevent
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escape. Copper suggests testing for infection by comparing the crew's blood
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against uncontaminated blood held in storage, but after learning the blood
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stores have been destroyed, the men lose faith in Garry's leadership, and
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MacReady takes command. He, Windows, and Nauls find Fuchs's burnt corpse and
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surmise he committed suicide to avoid assimilation. Windows returns to base
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while MacReady and Nauls investigate MacReady's shack. During their return,
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Nauls abandons MacReady in a snowstorm, believing he has been assimilated
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after finding his torn clothes in the shack. The team debates whether to allow
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MacReady inside, but he breaks in and holds the group at bay with dynamite.
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During the encounter, Norris appears to suffer a heart attack. As Copper
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attempts to defibrillate Norris, his chest transforms into a large mouth and
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bites off Copper's arms, killing him. MacReady incinerates the Norris-Thing,
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but its head detaches and attempts to escape before also being burnt. MacReady
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hypothesizes that the Norris-Thing demonstrated that every part of the Thing
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is an individual life-form with its own survival instinct. He proposes testing
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blood samples from each survivor with a heated piece of wire and has each man
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restrained, but is forced to kill Clark after he lunges at MacReady with a
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scalpel. Everyone passes the test except Palmer, whose blood recoils from the
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heat. Exposed, the Palmer-Thing transforms, breaks free of its bonds, and
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infects Windows, forcing MacReady to incinerate them both. Childs is left on
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guard while the others go to test Blair, but they find that he has escaped,
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and has been using vehicle components to assemble a small flying saucer ,
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which they destroy. Upon their return, Childs is missing, and the power
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generator is destroyed, leaving the men without heat. MacReady speculates
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that, with no escape left, the Thing intends to return to hibernation until a
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rescue team arrives. MacReady, Garry, and Nauls agree that the Thing cannot be
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allowed to escape and set explosives to destroy the station, but the Blair-
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Thing kills Garry, and Nauls disappears. The Blair-Thing transforms into an
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enormous creature and breaks the detonator, but MacReady triggers the
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explosives with a stick of dynamite, destroying the station. While MacReady
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sits by the burning remnants, Childs returns, claiming he got lost in the
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storm while pursuing Blair. Exhausted and slowly freezing to death, they
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acknowledge the futility of their distrust and share a bottle of Scotch whisky
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. Cast [ edit ] Kurt Russell (left, pictured in 2016) and Keith David (2015)
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Kurt Russell as R.J. MacReady , the helicopter pilot [1] A. Wilford Brimley as
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Blair, the senior biologist [2] [3] [4] T. K. Carter as Nauls, the cook [5]
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[4] David Clennon as Palmer, the assistant mechanic [6] Keith David as Childs,
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the chief mechanic [3] [4] [6] Richard Dysart as Dr. Copper, the physician [3]
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[6] Charles Hallahan as Norris, the geologist [6] Peter Maloney as George
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Bennings, the meteorologist [7] [8] Richard Masur as Clark, the dog handler
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[4] Joel Polis as Fuchs, the assistant biologist [6] Donald Moffat as Garry,
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the station commander [6] Thomas Waites as Windows, the radio operator [6] The
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Thing also features Norbert Weisser as one of the Norwegians, [9] and an
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uncredited dog, Jed , as the Dog-Thing. [10] The only female presence in the
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film is the voice of MacReady's chess computer, voiced by Carpenter's then-
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wife, Adrienne Barbeau . [11] [12] Producer David Foster, associate producer
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