How John Carpenter Turned “The Thing” into a Horror Classic

John Carpenter’s The Thing is a classic in the horror genre. Most fans consider it Carpenter’s high-water mark.
What many don’t know is that The Thing that was released to theaters was very different from what was originally planned and filmed. When Carpenter saw a rough cut he realized that the movie didn’t work. It lacked tension (can you believe that?), the pace was slow and MacCready (played by Kurt Russell) was just another face in the crowd.
Luckily a six-week break had been built into the shooting schedule. During that time Carpenter…
…restructured the film, wrote what was essentially a new Second Act to conform to the editing he had done (including new death scenes for two characters), adopted MacCready as his spiritual doppelganger, and scrambled to get all of it shot on location in Stewart, B.C. Coming face to face with his own greatest fear – fear of failure – he was able to make THE THING undeniably his…
Stuart Cohen was a co-producer on The Thing. Cohen was on location during filming and in his blog, details the changes that Carpenter brought about to turn a movie that didn’t work into a horror classic.


















































