Top Billed Cast
Popularity Trend
Media

The Thing (1982) | Modern Trailer | (HD)(4K)
Trailer

The Thing (1982) - Trailer HD 1080p
Trailer

The Thing (1982) - Theatrical Trailer | Scope | 4K
Trailer

Official Trailer
Trailer

The Thing Official Trailer #1 - Keith David Movie (1982) HD
Trailer

Mac's Horrifying Discovery - Extended Preview
Clip

THE THING 1982 miniature effects
Behind the Scenes

"He's Not Breathing" - Extended Preview
Clip

40th Anniversary Spot
Teaser

The Blood Test
Clip

The Thing - The Arrow Video Story
Featurette
![The Thing - Promotional Condensed Version [1982] [Unused Scenes]](https://img.youtube.com/vi/ZtZmTsk3Ffs/hqdefault.jpg)
The Thing - Promotional Condensed Version [1982] [Unused Scenes]
Featurette

The Thing (1982) - Bonus Clip 3: New Interviews With Joel Polis, Peter Maloney, And Thomas G. Waites
Featurette

The Thing (1982) - Bonus Clip 2: New Interviews With Actors, Richard Masur and Peter Maloney
Featurette

The Thing (1982) - Bonus Clip 1: New Interviews With Mick Garris and Director John Carpenter
Featurette

It's Alive!
Clip

Kill It!
Clip

The Thing (1982) rare teaser trailer, ‘ice block’
Teaser
Social
Written on October 31, 2015
John Carpenter shows how much he loves the 1951 original by giving it the utmost respect that he possibly could, the only difference here is that Carpenter chooses to stick to the paranoiac core of John W Campbell Jr's short story.
The secret to this version's success is the unbearable tension that builds up as the group of men become suspicious of each other, the strain of literally waiting to be taken over takes a fearful hold. Carpenter then manages to deliver the shocks as well as the mystery that's needed to keep the film heading in the right direction.
Be it an horrific scene or a "what is in the shadow" sequence, the film is the perfect fusion of horror and sci-fi. The dialogue is laced with potency and viability for a group of men trying to keep it together under such duress, while Ennio Morricone's score is a wonderful eerie pulse beat that further racks up the sense of doom and paranoia seaming throughout the film.
The cast are superb, a solid assembly line of actors led by Carpenter favourite Kurt Russell, whilst the effects used around the characters get the right amount of impact needed. But most of all it's the ending that is the crowning glory, an ending that doesn't pander to the norm and is incredibly fitting for what has gone on before it. Lets wait and see what happens indeed. 10/10































































