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Eadie Galactic Ambassador

Joined: 14 Dec 2013 Posts: 1670
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Posted: Tue Jan 28, 2020 3:35 pm Post subject: The Thing Remake |
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Blumhouse Reportedly Working On The Thing Remake Based On Author’s Long-Lost Novel
https://theplaylist.net/blumhouse-thing-remake-long-lost-novel-20200128/
Horror film remakes are nothing new. After a franchise lays dormant for a few years, Hollywood has the tendency to dust it off and take a new stab at box office glory. Well, it appears that Blumhouse and Universal are set to do that with John Carpenter’s The Thing. However, this remake isn’t your typical run-of-the-mill studio rehash. Not by a long shot.
Before we jump into that, it’s important to understand just how this new version of The Thing came about. Both the original film The Thing From Another Wirls and Carpenter’s The Thing were based on the 1938 novella Who Goes There? by John W. Campbell. But in 2018, it was discovered that Campbell had a longer, complete novel transcript that had never been seen, titled Frozen Hell. A Kickstarter was funded to bring the novel-length version of the story, Frozen Hell, to publication, and now, Hollywood is interested in adapting that.
According to a post on the Kickstarter page from the campaign’s founder, John Betancourt, Blumhouse and Universal are fast-tracking the film. And in a now-deleted post on Facebook (via Betancourt’s Kickstarter), Executive Producer Alan Donnes gave even more details:
“It’s OFFICIAL! I received my signed contract and first check! I am Executive Producing a remake of The Thing but with additional chapters of John Campbell’s groundbreaking novel, Frozen Hell, that had been lost for decades.
Now, for the first time ever, Campbell’s full vision will be realized on the big screen. The new film will include the very best of RKO’s The Thing From Another World, John Carpenter’s classic The Thing and both books, Frozen Hell and Who Goes There?”
The Thing, particularly the John Carpenter version from 1982, is regarded as one of the very best horror films of all time. Back in 2011, a remake was released starring Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Joel Edgerton, however, that film was far from a critical darling and didn’t necessarily excite horror fans that were hoping for something on par with Carpenter’s vision. But with the long-lost novel as inspiration, perhaps this new version of The Thing can do for the franchise what Carpenter was able to do when he remade the ‘50s film The Thing From Another World. _________________ ____________
Art Should Comfort the Disturbed and Disturb the Comfortable. |
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johnnybear Mission Specialist

Joined: 15 Jun 2016 Posts: 441
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Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2020 8:02 am Post subject: |
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But what about the remake/prequel of a few years back? (Which I haven't seen yet)
JB |
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alltare Quantum Engineer

Joined: 17 Jul 2015 Posts: 349
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Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2020 3:30 pm Post subject: |
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johnnybear wrote: | But what about the remake/prequel of a few years back? (Which I haven't seen yet)
JB |
I think that's the 2011 version that Eadie mentioned. It was a prequel to Carpenter's 1982 release. I thought it was OK. |
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Bud Brewster Galactic Fleet Admiral (site admin)

Joined: 14 Dec 2013 Posts: 17637 Location: North Carolina
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Posted: Tue Apr 19, 2022 4:16 pm Post subject: |
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Eadie wrote: | Now, for the first time ever, Campbell’s full vision will be realized on the big screen. The new film will include the very best of RKO’s The Thing From Another World, John Carpenter’s classic The Thing and both books, Frozen Hell and Who Goes There?” |
What this all means is a bit beyond me . . .
The 1951 classic was one kind of story, and the 1982 Carpenter version was another kind. The original Who Goes There? has it own unique quality, and we have no idea just how Frozen Hell differs from Who Goes There?.
Claiming that this new film "will include the very best" of all these versions sounds a bit too good to be true. A good story can't be a smorgasbord of several other versions. It has to be true to a single unique concept.
However, I'm not saying the new version can't include elements of each previous version. I'm just wary of the claims that it will include "the very best" of each one.
What makes all this so confusing is the fact that we don't know how Who Goes There? differs from Frozen Hell. I wish I could read this "lost novel" and compare the two.
Fortunately, Amazon offers Frozen Hell for $125 in hardback, $17.12 in paperback, and $6.49 in Kindles!
I think I'll download the Kindle and find out just what this version has to offer.
This is how Amazon pitches this book.
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Fans of John Carpenter's "The Thing" can rejoice -- here is the original, previously-unpublished, 45-pages-longer version of John W. Campbell's classic story, "Who Goes There?" (filmed as "The Thing" and "The Thing from Another World"). Recently discovered at Harvard by scholar Alec Nevala-Lee, long buried in John W. Campbell's papers, here is the original version of "Who Goes There?" It adds an astonishing 45 pages of extra material to the classic story.
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Is there no man on Earth who has the wisdom and innocence of a child?
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