Ty Watches "The Thing" on the Big Screen

Over the weekend I was fortunate enough to have a buddy who invited me to see "The Thing" in the theater. Let’s discuss.

My friend had been watching a bunch of John Carpenter lately, and he told me he had never seen "The Thing" in the theaters. We are both too young to have gone to a theater, but I did ask him if he had seen the movie prior. He was quick to let me know that he had. I watched it for the first time relatively recently. I want to say that my wife and I watched it last Halloween. We each pick random movies every weekend we are home to watch, it was my turn to pick, I heard a bunch of people saying how great the movie was, so I finally decided it was time for us to watch.

"The Thing" is an incredible movie. It was way ahead of its time. The practical effects were amazing. I don't think any movie has gotten to the level with practical effects that "The Thing" was able to achieve. The acting and writing were superb. I found myself not trusting anyone in the movie as it went on. And tons of movie makers have tried to recreate this feeling since, to varying degrees. Kurt Russell and Keith David are so, so good. They are, for all intents and purposes, the main characters, with Russell getting a bit more screen time. But it all comes down to those two in the end and they own every scene that they're in for the entirety of the movie. The movie takes place in Antarctica, and the way Carpenter directed, you feel cold while watching. There's snow everywhere. The wind is whipping around the base camp. The actors' clothes are snow covered every time they reenter the camp. It just makes you frigid while watching. I got all of this when I watched this movie in my home.

Seeing it on the big screen though, that was a whole other level. I went into this viewing very excited. I know the ins and outs of the movie, I have made my own feelings well known with the people in my life, what I think about the ending and I went into this viewing looking for stuff that I may have missed. I tried to have as keen an eye as I could. And I think it kind of worked. I noticed the dog way sooner than I did the first time. The crowd would ooh and aah at certain points, and those scenes made more sense to this time. I watched each and every crew member with a closer eye. I wanted to see if I could pinpoint when they were turned by the alien. I wanted to find all this stuff out.

But it was the crowd and my buddy who made this viewing so much cooler for me. I love that local theaters are showing older, restored movies on the big screen. Seeing "The Thing" at the Hi Pointe, a local indie movie theater, is the best way to watch a movie like this. Seeing it with people my age or older, people who have loved this movie since it first came out, people who have a true affinity for it, that ruled. I like how the people who were a little older than me, you could see the pure enjoyment on their faces while watching. Nostalgia is very big right now, and doing something like this is a big money making endeavor. And it lets people see the movie the way they saw it as a kid. That is what is truly important in this scenario. The theater was also about half full, which for a 9:30pm show on a Saturday night, that's a good sign to me. I also truly enjoyed having a conversation with my buddy about our feelings after the movie. I truly liked his insight.

I'm here to say that on April 6th of 2026, I believe that Keith David had turned into a thing, and he and Kurt Russell were going to die on that base camp. I used to believe that they were both human, but after seeing that David's character had no breath coming out, and that he drank what may be gasoline in that wine bottle, I do think he turned into a thing. He also disappeared with no warning when he was supposed to be looking out. That is the first sign that the thing got him.

I cannot recommend going to see this movie in a theater if you get the chance. It will change your outlook and you will view it in a whole new light. Also, if you haven't seen "The Thing" ever, rectify that right now and watch it. "The Thing" rules and seeing it on a big screen makes it even better. I had a blast. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Better Late Than Never on "The Thing"

About a week ago I finally watched "The Thing". A bunch of people have been telling me I needed to see this movie. Friends and family members have been on my case. I have heard people on podcasts singing its praises. I have heard how ahead of its time, and flat out great this movie is. And with it being date night in October, the only month I will watch vaguely scary movies, it seemed like a logical choice. So we watched.

I have to tell you all, everyone telling me to watch this movie was right. "The Thing" is an incredible movie. Take in the fact that it came out in 1982, this movie was definitely ahead of its time. That is what amazed me most about this movie. The acting is wonderful. The writing is next level. The direction is close to perfect. But it is all the other stuff surrounding this movie that makes it so great. The monster in this movie is absolutely terrifying. When I first laid eyes on it I had to close them right away. I was legitimately scared. I kept saying to my wife, "what is it?!", or "why is it?!". I could not put my finger on what the monster was supposed to be, and that was what made it extra scary.

The effects in “The Thing” were amazing. It worked on every level. It did the job that every monster movie aims to do. I was scared, my wife was scared, the monster achieved its goal. And it looked like it would work today. You can tell that this movie was made in the early 80's, but the monster effects would work now. It was not like other movies that came out back then. Movies with monsters back then looked hokey and rough. Not "The Thing". When the monster first appeared, through a dog, the way it showed itself, and tried to attach itself to other living, breathing things, I was fascinated. The way they showed it spread out and latched on, it totally worked. I bought it. It made sense and it looked good. Then I remembered it came out in 1982 and I was floored. To be this ahead of its own time was truly an achievement. I liked what this movie did on so many more levels than what "Citizen Kane" did. Both are epics, and the movie making world owes a humongous debt of gratitude to both, but "The Thing" is a far superior movie in my opinion.

You add on the other level of horror this movie brings about, paranoia. The paranoia between the guys living in the cabin in the Arctic was truly horrifying. I was, maybe, more scared at the paranoia than the monster. The way everyone starts to turn on each other was wild. When they draw blood to test who may or may not be infected, that was one of the scariest moments in the movie. When Wilfred Brimley, the scientist in the movie, has his computer screen open and it says something about infecting the whole world in record time, with COVID in the world now, it hit home and scared me even more. I am still trying to shake that image. When some of the guys do get infected, the way they transform and everyone else just stares, it was mortifying. But the way they continually turn on one another, it was like a class in paranoia acting. I like scary movies that do stuff like this way more than slasher movies or jump scare movies.

"The Thing" is a classic for a reason. I now understand why so many people were on my case to watch it. It makes total sense. I am a fool for waiting so long. This is why John Carpenter is so respected in the scary movie world. I loved "The Thing". I get it now. Check it out if you have not seen it yet. It rules.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.