
So I thought I'd take a look at some reasons (three, actually) why Carpenter's film (as well as a few other successful remakes) worked so well, as a sort-of How To guide for those filmmakers out there thinking about doing something similar. It's learnin' time, y'all!

But beyond the film's lead The Thing is filled with terrific actors showing off their stuff. Keith David, Richard Dysart, Richard Masur... Wilford fuckin' Brimley, man! Good casting is an obvious boon to any project, but apparently it needs to be pointed out that Chad Michael fucking Murray should not be head-lining a film most closely formerly associated with Vincent Price, so that's what I'm doing.

The more you know, yo.
2 - Special Effects - This is sort of the "duh" answer too but it's obviousness hardly subtracts from its value. The special effects in The Thing are considered by many to be the pinnacle of the sort of hands-on practical special effects of the 1980s, and they still retain most of their horror effectiveness. The "Spider-Head" sequence, as its come to be known, is still a jaw-dropping thing to watch for both its inventiveness and the sheer Uncanny effect it still produces. Things are not supposed to happen the way they happen here, you know? Just the fact that the head is upside-down! It's amazing for its wrongness. The point is, it's not a large man lumbering around as the threat like it was in the original.

It's a dog splitting open and a head turning into a giant mouth and other various multi-tentacled horrors... Carpenter took a story that beyond its relatively simple story was just begging to be a showcase for special-effects since its germination and he threw all 1982's best at it and made it a classic. So if you're looking for a property to remake, filmmakers, look at films whose ideas can finally be caught up with by where special effects are now.
3 - Theme - This one's the most important from my perspective. If there's a good enough idea at the heart of the story that can be updated to fit into a new time, then the film can make for a good remake. So very simple, you'd think! The tale at the heart of The Thing is about isolation and the paranoia that it breeds, and every age needs its paranoia parables. It's also why vampires will never go anywhere - the myth at the heart of their story is too rich and can be spun off into a million different directions. And it's why a film like Invasion of the Body Snatchers can be remade every fifteen years or so and find something new to say. (Although I'm still a little confused by what Oliver Hirschbiegel's 2007 version was saying, but it sure was neat-o when the aliens barfed into the coffee pots!)

But my point remains that one of the most vital componants of a successful remake is the germ of an idea at the story's center has something to say or can be twisted to say something new about The World We Live In Now. Without that what's the point? As much as I love Cronenberg's Videodrome, after rewatching it the other week I really have no idea what a remake could accomplish or say about our world today that the original isn't still saying. As for movies like the original Prom Night and its slasher-ilk, as much as I love them they didn't have anything really to say besides "Hack! Stab! Slash!" in the first place. Is their supposed "name recognition" with the tweens of today really so astoundingly worthy that you can't just siphon these stories into their own new container?
I don't know why I'm flinging rhetorical questions like this at the villainous Hollywood Executives that exist in my mind, but I am. I am! Damn you, Suits! I have things to say! Liiisten toooo meeeeee!
Especially you, Ron Moore & Co. responsible for the third iteration of The Thing coming to a screen near us all some day soon supposedly. Until you do right by The Thing everything you even think about is gonna crumble!
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