The Thing from Another World

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The Thing
Directed by Christian Nyby
Howard Hawks (uncredited)
Written by Novella:
John W. Campbell, Jr.
Screenplay:
Charles Lederer
Uncredited:
Howard Hawks
Ben Hecht
Starring Margaret Sheridan
Kenneth Tobey
Douglas Spencer
Robert O. Cornthwaite
Release date(s) April 29, 1951
Running time 87 min.
Edited version:
81 min.
Language English
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

The Thing from Another World is a 1951 science fiction film which tells the story of an Air Force crew and scientists at a remote Arctic research outpost who fight a malevolent alien being. It stars Kenneth Tobey, Margaret Sheridan, Robert Cornthwaite and Douglas Spencer. James Arness appeared as The Thing, difficult to recognize in costume and makeup. Oddly, no players are named during the otherwise-complete opening credits; the only cast credit is at the end (this was somewhat unusual in the 1950s).

The movie was loosely adapted by Charles Lederer (with uncredited rewrites from Howard Hawks and Ben Hecht) from the 1938 novella "Who Goes There?" by John W. Campbell, Jr. (originally published under the pseudonym Don A. Stuart). It was directed by Hawks (uncredited) and Christian Nyby for Hawks' Winchester Pictures, which released it through RKO Radio Pictures Inc.

The film took advantage of the national feelings of the time to help enhance the horror elements of the story. The film's release in 1951 coincided with the Korean War and the upswing in anti-communist feelings brought on by McCarthyism. The idea of Americans being stalked by a force which was single-minded and "devoid of morality" fit in well with the parallel feelings of the day on communism. Equally the film reflected a post-Hiroshima scepticism about science and negative views of scientists who meddle with things better left alone. In the end, it is American servicemen and "sensible" scientists who win the day over the monster.

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[edit] Plot summary

A U.S. Air Force re-supply crew is dispatched from Anchorage, Alaska at the request of Dr. Carrington (Robert Cornthwaite), the chief researcher of a group of scientists working at a remote research base in the Arctic - Polar Expedition Six. They have evidence that an aircraft of some kind has crashed nearby. The crew takes along Scotty (Douglas Spencer), a reporter and former war correspondent, who is hanging around the base in search of a story. A sub-plot running through the story involves a spirited romance between the commanding officer, Captain Patrick Hendry (Kenneth Tobey) and Carrington's secretary, Nikki Nicholson (Margaret Sheridan).

When Hendry's crew land at the crash site (having picked up the scientists), they find the wreckage almost completely covered in ice, and are shocked to discover that the shape of the craft is round - a flying saucer. They attempt to free it from the ice with thermite explosives, but in doing so, accidentally destroy the craft. However, one team member with a geiger counter finds that there is a body nearby frozen in the ice.

They excavate the body, preserving it in a large ice block and return to the research outpost as a major storm moves in, making communication with Anchorage very difficult. Some of the scientists want to thaw out the creature immediately, but Hendry orders everyone to wait until he receives orders from Anchorage. Feeling uneasy, one of the Air Force crew guarding the body covers the ice block with a blanket, not realizing it is an electric blanket, and the creature thaws out and revives.

The creature is attacked by sled dogs as it escapes, and the scientists recover an arm, bitten off by the dogs. They examine it, and as it warms and ingests the blood from one of the dogs, it begins to come back to life. They learn that, while appearing humanoid, the creature is in fact an advanced form of plant life. Dr. Carrington is convinced that the creature can be reasoned with, while the Air Force men are just as sure it cannot and may be dangerous.

Carrington later discovers the hidden body of a sled dog, drained of blood in the greenhouse. He has volunteers from his own team to stand guard, some of whom are later killed by the creature. The USAF crew then manage to trap it in the greenhouse.

Carrington realizes that the creature requires human blood to reproduce and he secretly uses plasma from the infirmary to incubate and nourish seedlings he has taken from the arm. The scientists also soon realize that the wounded creature will need more blood, and that it will not be confined in the greenhouse for long. The creature soon escapes and breaks back into the camp, but Captain Hendry and his men set it alight with kerosene (following a suggestion from Nikki about how to deal with vegetables - "boil them, fry them?") and it flees into the snowy night.

Before long the creature returns, and disables the camp's oil-burning heater, forcing the scientists and the airmen to make a final stand at the generator shack. They create a trap for the creature using high voltage electricity as a weapon. As the creature advances on them, Carrington twice tries to stop the creature's demise; once by shutting off the power, and the second by running out onto the trap and trying to reason with the creature. He fails and the creature bats him aside.

The creature is electrocuted, shrinking to a husk as it is killed. Its seedlings are also destroyed. As the film closes, Hendry and Nikki are set to become engaged as Scotty files his "story of a lifetime" by radio, imploring his listeners to "Watch the skies!"

[edit] Production notes

The screenplay changes the fundamental nature of the alien as presented in Campbell's short story: Lederer's "Thing" is a humanoid monster whose cellular structure is closer to vegetation although it must feed on blood to survive. One character describes it as an "intellectual carrot". In the original story, the "Thing" is a lifeform capable of assuming the physical and mental characteristics of anyone it chooses. This aspect was realized in the John Carpenter remake of the film in 1982. Ronald D. Moore is working on the script for another remake of the film expected between 2009 and 2011.[1]

When American Movie Classics showed the movie in the 1990s, the introduction related a story about the creation of the creature's makeup. The makeup artist supposedly went through several revisions of the creature's face. He would test each one by putting the full makeup on Arness and taking him for a drive through Los Angeles. At one point, a woman in the next car screamed and fainted upon seeing the creature. The makeup artist "knew he had a winner" and used that face in the movie.

As is common in many of Howard Hawks' films, the dialogue is notable for its snappy, fast pace and overlapping style, with characters (major and supporting) often speaking over each others lines in a realistic way.

In 2001, the United States Library of Congress deemed the original film "culturally significant" and selected it for preservation in the National Film Registry.

The film was released on DVD in 2003.

An 81-minute version of the film also exists. This shorter print, which deletes some sequences of character development, was prepared for a theatrical re-release and has also been shown on television.

[edit] Remake

In 1982, John Carpenter made a more faithful version of the story "Who Goes There?" under the remake-suggestive title The Thing. It was already well-known that Carpenter was a fan of the original film, as he included considerable footage from it in his own Halloween.

Certain elements of Carpenter's film were heavily suggested (including the "burning letters" opening titles) by this film. Also during The Thing, the characters make reference to a 'Norwegian' team that used thermite charges to clear the ice around the UFO, this is a direct reference to the team in the original film.

[edit] Other media

  • The last line of the film, "Watch the skies," was the working title of the film that would become Close Encounters of the Third Kind. In an interesting twist, a sequel to that film was then considered that would have been titled Watch the Skies - except this time with malevolent aliens terrorizing a farm family. That film project eventually became the movie E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial. See more at Night Skies for the full project history.
  • The famous last line was also parodied in The Simpsons episode "The Springfield Files". The pimple faced boy takes over the narration at the end of the episode, and, reading from a cue card says Keep watching the skis!, only then to correct himself. In another episode, Martin Prince uses the line to end his nomination speech for class president, in which he promises a science fiction library for the class.

[edit] Film quotes

Captain Hendry: Twenty thousand tons of steel is an awful lot of metal for an airplane.

Carrington: It is for the sort of airplane we KNOW, Captain.

Scotty: An intellectual carrot: the mind boggles!

Scotty: Watch the skies, everywhere! Keep looking. Keep watching the skies!

Scotty: I'm not, therefore, going to stick my neck out and say that you're stuffed absolutely clean full of wild blueberry muffins, but I promise you my readers are going to think so.

[edit] References

[edit] External links