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The Thing |
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An American research team at a remote Antarctic research station is startled when, out of the blue, a Norwegian helicopter circles their camp, firing desperately at a loose sled dog, recklessly endangering the men in the camp. Before the Norwegians can harm anyone, the helicopter crashes, killing the pilot; the leader of the American mission kills the remaining man before the Norwegian can fire into the midst of the other researchers. Helicopter pilot McReady (Kurt Russell) sets out with two other men to discover the reason behind the Norwegians’ erratic behavior. When they reach the foreign research station, all they find is devastation. The whole camp is dead, charred beyond recognition. McReady and his men explore the site and make a fascinating discovery: The Norwegians seem to have discovered a spaceship in the eternal arctic ice, and it appears that they have uncovered and unfrozen the alien life form that navigated the ship. They don’t discover exactly why the camp is dead, but they take samples |
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“The Thing” is John Carpenter’s most recognized and acclaimed film. While I do not want to belittle “The Thing” in any way, I think it is fair to say that he has created a multitude of other high caliber films as well, many of which are totally underrated and misunderstood. “The Thing” was the first film Carpenter did for a major studio. All his previous efforts and many after have been |
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The film boasts an incredible cast, spearheaded by Kurt Russell. The cast “feels” very real in their mutual animosities within their enclosed, isolated camp. They eye each other suspiciously, building an unhealthy paranoia, fostering a mistrust that becomes |
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Universal present “The Thing” in its original theatrical 2.35:1 widescreen aspect ratio on this disc. Although the transfer on this disc is non-anamorphic, the image quality is superb, with lots of detail and very good shadow work, creating a stunning look for this film. Better looking than ever, the disc does not exhibit any signs of chroma noise or compression artifacts. Colors are strong and vibrant, which adds to the film’s sometimes almost surreal atmosphere. John Carpenter’s visual style has long been influenced by Asian film making and the heavy use of blue and red tones in this film clearly pay homage to many Hong Kong fantasy movies. The strong and faithful color reproduction on this disc is breathtaking and adds much to the film’s overall appeal, making it a very vivid disc with neutral and realistic rendered fleshtones nevertheless. |
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them. I have noticed this several times before with his scores and instead of supporting the images we see, he often destroys the illusion with his counterproductive scores. It is a shame, because within the break of a second the magic Carpenter and his cinematographer Dean Cundey have been building is shattered. It makes me wish the talented director himself would have written and orchestrated the music, as he successfully did in other films with his longtime collaborator Alan Howarth. |
Universal’s Collector’s Edition DVDs have always been a notch above the rest and this one is no exception. Apart from the film, this RSDL disc contains an 82-minute-long documentary covering different aspects of the production of the film, from the start and location scouting to casting to a detailed explanation of the film’s special effects. The documentary also features some never-before seen stop-motion animation footage that was considered for the film’s finale as well as a number of behind-the-scenes clips. The disc also contains extensive still galleries, featuring Rob Bottin’s effect designs, storyboard sketches, concept art, behind-the-scenes photographs and a number of deleted scenes. Rounded up with pictures from the film’s premiere in Los Angeles with a special appearance by hostess Cassandra “Elvira” Peterson in 1982, extensive production notes, trailers, biographies and much, much more, this is as thick a special edition as you could possibly ask for. The Collector’s Edition has been put together by Sharpline Arts, a new company that has committed itself to producing some of the finest special editions, and I have to tip my hat to them for this debut. David Fein and Michael Matessino, the heads behind Sharpline, have thrown in their experience from creating Laserdisc special editions for films, such as The Abyss, Alien and Aliens, and have literally set a new standard for DVD special editions to come. |
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horror film extraordinaire. Seeing it in all its glory in a widescreen presentation on this disc with a full bodied Dolby Digital soundtrack is definitely a rush. |
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