Fuck this fucking movie.
My gut knew it wasn't going to be pretty. Especially when I found out the screenwriter was the same person that wrote (get ready) the
Nightmare on Elm Street remake. But did I know how ugly? Did I have the slightest conception of the depths that it was going to slobber and fuck over my memories of the Carpenter version? No. I was like those Lovecraft protagonists (minus an authorial transference of casual racism), realizing something was wrong but that the breadth was far beyond my grasp, so at the end all I can do is laugh like Sam Neill at the end of
In the Mouth of Madness.
Part of the problem can be traced to the whole boneheaded idea of trying to remake
The Thing by doing a prequel of it. In doing so, you've stepped into crazy murky waters, as you're ostensibly creating a new plot while having to sort of hug onto the original plot for protection, like a baby bear with worms. Not at all surprising in retrospect, My Least Favorite Screenwriter in History handled this the same way he did with the
Nightmare remake: Clumsily patch favorite scenes from the original to a shoddy original plot, then go completely off the rails with a wretched ending with enough plot holes to hide a universe destroying morphing race spaceship in.
I'll say one thing and one thing only, as it's the only reason this film got anything resembling positive reviews: it's competently made and acted in. But hey so was the
Nightmare remake, and honestly if you're giving any credence to horror films because of the quality of their effects then go the fuck away. I guess I can also say that the only thing God I am Going to Punch You Screenwriter-San does right is that he also manages to avoid any romantic subplot, so kudos laced with rat poison for that. Unfortunately, this leaves the plot. The opening thirty minutes function exactly how you'd expect, for better or worse. Spaceship found, alien excavated, science does some retarded shit, alien breaks out and ohhhh nooooo. Since this was strictly paint by numbers plot wise, I was just sort of bored here.
Then we have the first major divergence from the original. As you may or may not recall from Carpenter's version, the time period between when the crew first sees the alien in action to when they realize its full capabilities was relatively short. Here, there's a 30 minute period of Dr. Ramona Flowers going "oh no guys something wrong" and all the dudes going "haw haw we're males." It makes sense logically, but it's still boring as hell, as that time period is people just shuffling around grumbling at each other. Then eventually the alien reappears and get ready for a descent into total incompetency.
Some of you are probably anticipating me bitching about the alien being quick. Honestly, I don't fucking care if it's fast or not, especially as it was the same sort of awkward shambler that we saw in the Carpenter film, there probably would have been not a single moment of tension in the film. What I do sort of care about is that the alien looks pretty fucking shitty. The remake Things are generally a simpleton's version of what they remember the Thing from Carpenter's version to be mixed in with nixed
Silent Hill designs: full of giant teeth and weird arms going everywhere and decidedly not really scary. Everything is just clean looking and stupid, missing any of the nightmare unfamiliar murkiness of the original.
So we find out that the alien can mimic, and we settle back. Finally, some of dat sweet paranoia that made Carpenter's version so goddamned good. All the characters are in the room, and...wait, they already developed the test? Okay. And some guys just escaped, all right, lots of opportunity for potential infections to be developed and questioned later and wait they already revealed the Thing and now it's just an extended chase sequence and
what the fuck is going on
Of the many things that pissed me off about this remake, it's this. I think even Hawk's version had more time devoted to the quidessential feeling that nobody could trust each other, the isolation exemplified within Antarctica. Instead, one gets the feeling that Holy Shit I'm So Goddamned Worthless at Everything Guy watched the Carpenter version and thought "boy, look at all these people talking, this is so boring, I'm gonna cut this stuff down to like fifteen minutes so I can get to what people really care about, why that ax was in the wall!" You think I'm joking, right?
“It’s a really fascinating way to construct a story because we're doing it by autopsy, by examining very, very closely everything we know about the Norwegian camp and about the events that happened there from photos and video footage that’s recovered, from a visit to the base, the director, producer and I have gone through it countless times marking, you know, there’s a fire axe in the door, we have to account for that…we're having to reverse engineer it, so those details all matter to us ‘cause it all has to make sense.”
— Eric Heisserer describing the process of creating a script that is consistent with the first film.[17]
HOLY SHIT WHO FUCKING CARES. THANK GOD MY IMAGINATION ISN'T ALLOWED TO CONCEPTUALIZE ANYTHING ANYMORE, WHOO 2011 SPRING BREAK HAND ME THAT GRENADE IT'S TIME FOR THE TRUE JAGERBOMB.
So the remaining 30 minutes of the movie are literally just a space monster slasher. It's not even a good slasher, but people running in rooms as a giant Thing monster also runs around in rooms and occasionally kills people and less occasionally recreates the kitchen scene from Jurassic Park. Near the end, one of the monsters takes an ATV to get back to the mothership, and it says alot about the success of this movie that I was fully expecting a Space Mutiny style chase sequence to close things out. But don't worry, instead we have an Alien ripoff where the lady is menaced by the Nilhilanth from Half-Life but then she shoots him in the weak point. Then she walks out of the spaceship with her Not-MacReady while he is holding the flamethrower and then he puts the flamethrower in the truck and then the lady kills him because he is ACTUALLY THE THING AND IF HE IS THE THING WHY DID HE NOT KILL HER WHILE HE HAD THE FLAMETHROWER AND WAIT ARE THOSE CREDITS WHAT THE FLYING FUCK
oh
oh wait
so here's a helicopter guy and he's seeing the thing
and there's the dog from wait wasn't that infected like at the start of the film why is it running out now and I guess that's the most FUCKING INEPT WAY YOU COULD DO A REACHAROUND TO THE ORIGINAL FILM GOOD JOB MR SCREENWRITER
In conclusion, this is what really galls me. You have a screenwriter going "hurp durp gonna tie up all these loose ends," to aspects of the Carpenter version I don't really care about, while at the same time just creating obvious, ridiculous plot holes to tie other stuff together that I also don't really care about, all while leaving the quidessential themes of the previous films out to die in the Antarctic wilderness. The Thing is a triumph of autism and boring fanboyism over imagination and creativity, so really just fuck this movie.
...One other thing. For all the hubbub about how the screenwriter, director, and producer watched the film a million times, they seemed to miss something that would have allowed an ending that would be both creepy and an actually creative twist on something. Re-watch the opening of the Carpenter version. Do you notice something about one of the two Norwegians on the plane? One of them is completely covered in clothes and never says anything, so the gender is indeterminate. It would have been entirely possible to have Winstead return to camp, completely devoid of emotion, then get shot at by the last Norwegian, then see the dog, have them get into some convenient helicopter and as they pull out, she pulls the clothes around her.*
It's so goddamned obvious that I can't think of why you wouldn't do it and instead leave her for some indeterminate fate.
Unless.
No. That's not possible. It can't be.
No.
No.
"I, Eric Heisserer, Screenwriter Extraordinary, can see it now! Ramona Flowers and MacReady, the ultimate duo and...maybe something more ;)"
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
*Edit: On watching the opening again, it's less clear whether the person on the left shows their face or not. It's more likely that the one on the left was the one that was shot by the Americans, but with the constant film cuts, one could conceivably argue that the two switched positions, so that the "uncovered" face on the right seat threw the grenade and ran (with gun now in hand? WHATEVER) while the uncovered searched for it and was blown up. It's awkward, but certainly makes more goddamned sense than anything in the remake.