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Rumors recently hit the web and now the trades have officially confirmed it - Matthijs Van Heijningen will direct Universal’s upcoming prequel to John Carpenter’s The Thing. Battlestar Galactica executive producer Ron Moore is writing the screenplay. The new project borrows heavily from the John W. Campbell Jr. short story "Who Goes There," the basis of the Carpenter film and 1951 Howard Hawks original The Thing From Another World. It is set in a Norwegian camp and chronicles how the shape-shifting alien was first discovered and overcame the inhabitants of that camp. Strike Entertainment's Eric Newman and Marc Abraham are producing.
I remember watching "THe Thing" as a kid. Was one of the most disturbing movies i'd ever seen. Because of that i loved it. Gotta tip your hat to Hollywood here. Capitalizing on bringing back another franchise... by the year 2030 we'll have three movie choices at the multiplex... Batman 42, Spiderman 49, and Friday the 13th 103... and yes, i'll buy a ticket to each
Given that we know everyone dies at the Norwegian base before Kurt Russell and his mates turn up at the start of the Carpenter movie, this film isn't going to have much of a "will they/won't they" tension, will it?
Personally, I thought Carpenter's film over rated and not a patch on the original 1950s Hawks/Nyby version.
Well, if they had choppers, at least three of them would have the chance to escape: The pilot, the shooter, and possibly another survivor or two IF they had another vehichle. I don't like the idea of having Norwegian guys speaking in English throughout the whole film, though (as they'd probably do). I hate "fake" English and I think it ruins the believeablilty of the scenario. It's like watching a movie about Samurais in English, or a film set in Spain or Mexico in English. It just doesn't fit.
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Personally, I thought Carpenter's film over rated and not a patch on the original 1950s Hawks/Nyby version.
You haven't read the short story, have you? Carpenter's film is not only better on all technical levels (obviously, given improvements in technology) but it is A LOT more faithful to the source material. Personally, I now refuse to even call Carpenter's The Thing a remake of the 50's film as amny seem to think it is. It's merely an adaptation of the same short story, and a better one at that.
No, I haven't - which is the point. You have to judge a film as a film, not as an adjunct of some other media.
And IMHO the Hawks/Nyby version is a much better film than Carpenter's regardless of whether it is a more faithful adaptation of the John Campbell story.
Carpenter has a thing about Hawks, of course - "Precinct 13" was essentially a modern day version of "Rio Bravo"! (In that case, of course, Carpenter not only made his finest film, but one of the best films ever made!).
his best is In the Mouth of Madness. I really, really love that movie.
Really?
I found it an incoherent mess, as is often the case with his films after the early 80s. He made a run of films - Dark Star, 13, Halloween, The Fog, The Thing, that were good or even great - and then seemed to lose the knack.
Personally, while I wouldn't say "In the Mouth of Madness" was his worst film - that would almost certainly be "Prince of Darkness" - it is up there with them!
I wouldn't go as far as to call it "incoherent." It was a better "Lovecraft" film than any other film actually based on his work! And he actually kept that surreal feeling throughout the film instead of doing a cop-ou tlike most films.
It was Carpenter's tribute to a great writer and I really enjoyed it.
Prince of Darkness was a great movie, but I like In The Mouth of Madness just as much, really. Though maybe I'm biased because I'm a Lovecraft junkie.
But I did get the feeling some years ago that Carpenter was not as good as he was before as a filmmaker.
I'd say Halloween is his best. Not my favorite. Not even in my top 3. But his best. I agree, In The Mouth of Madness is great. I love Sam Neil and the Lovecraft mythos. The Thing is probably my favorite. I think a prequel seems kind of pointless. It's already been said. The Norwegians die. What's the point? A sequel might be interest. They had a Thing video game for X-Box a few years back that was supposed to be a sequel. Worked out pretty well to me and it was a fun game. If they did it right, a sequel could be good.
I found it an incoherent mess, as is often the case with his films after the early 80s. He made a run of films - Dark Star, 13, Halloween, The Fog, The Thing, that were good or even great - and then seemed to lose the knack.
Personally, while I wouldn't say "In the Mouth of Madness" was his worst film - that would almost certainly be "Prince of Darkness" - it is up there with them!
That's the thing. He changed after the '80s, but not to say in a bad way. His films went more towards the fun route. Escape from L.A., Vampires (James Woods was its only redeeming quality), Ghosts of Mars. I enjoy L.A. and Ghosts but they're not the greatness that Carpenter was doing in the '80s.
Last thing, how do you mention his '80s awesomeness without mentioning Big Trouble or They Live? Shame. =)
"No matter what you do, somebody is going to come after you. You say 'The Thing Begins' and they go, 'John Carpenter's is the beginning, asshole. Yours is like 'The Thing Bullshit'. Why don't you call it that?" -- Producer Marc Abraham on possible fanboy reactions to a new title.
He really should call it that.
Mod Note: Merged threads. Search button, all the cool kids are doing it... Search button? That's like reading an instruction manual. No cool person does that.
Down in the hole / Jesus tries to crack a smile / Beneath another shovel load
I'm getting the same feeling when I heard the follow up to JPJ's Alien 4 Ressurection was gonna be Alien Vs Predator. Now it had Lance in it. And Ewen Bremner, two of my favourite actors, Boyle and Cameron regulars. However, I knew, as Snipe puts it, the Stink.
Every year I make sure I watch the following films at least once...
Full Metal Jacket 2001 Amelie Life is Beautiful Godfather(s) Apocalypse Now Taxi Driver Goodfellas The Thing The Thin Red Line Sexy Beast Nil By Mouth The War Zone Reservoir Dogs The Thing
There's a few others I try to revisit. But I have to toilet, eat and talk and do things so I don't always manage it.
CGI didn't exist when Carpenter made TT. They had to act and use bits of sticks and gooh. Bloody thing still scares the bejasus outta me.
Following up a film of this calibre is like building beside the Pyramids. Either make it amazing or don't bloody bother.
Whoever has a mountain to climb to even come close to this. I very much doubt they'll succeed in getting anywhere near the top.
So there.
In The Mouth Of Madness was also part of JC's Apocalypse trilogy. Watch that instead. NZ's Sam Neill does a good turn in it.
What's that noise? Oh, it must be Bill Lancaster turning in his grave.
L&P
Oh dear. Just heard Norman Wisdom died. He probably heard about this debacle and had enough. RIP Norm.
Every year I make sure I watch the following films at least once...
Full Metal Jacket 2001 Amelie Life is Beautiful Godfather(s) Apocalypse Now Taxi Driver Goodfellas The Thing The Thin Red Line Sexy Beast Nil By Mouth The War Zone Reservoir Dogs The Thing
So you're watching The Thing twice at least once a year, Ren?
I have a feeling they're gonna jam pack this movie with CGI. It's probably cheaper than doing it practial but in the end it'll look CGI'ish.
Rob Bottin will be turning in his grave.
Oh, wait.
He's, like, not dead.
Down in the hole / Jesus tries to crack a smile / Beneath another shovel load