“Yes, I know. I know who’s the Thing and who’s not in the very end,” he said during an interview with ComicBook.com. But if you were hoping for any elaboration, then keep on hoping. “Nope,” Carpenter added when probed for more information. “Cannot tell you. Sorry,”

It was pretty much the same answer he gave SYFY WIRE last summer: “I know, but I’m not telling you … I just feel like it’s a secret that must be kept. The gods came down and swore me to secrecy.”

  • @Bytemeister
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    1 year ago

    Hmm, a theory I’ve had for a while is that the thing isn’t making careful calculated plans. It’s actually kind of desperate, feral, and afraid of the people.

    I don’t think the Things are coordinated/working together, or are aware of other Things that they haven’t created. Consider that when Bennings gets attacked, Palmer is already a thing at that point. It didn’t need to do anything else to get off Antarctica.

    I think Things are greedy. It wasn’t enough to just get away, It was compelled to quietly assimilate all the life at the outpost. Only at the end, when it became clear that the people had the tools and knowledge to deal with it, did it try to just kill everyone and freeze again.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      Yeah, definitely think the thing is terrified and desperate and also that they’re separate beings.

      But I just found out that the 2011 movie and the 2002 video game are supposed to be canon, at least the 2002 video game. Everyone is claiming that John Carpenter explicitly stated it was canon, which would answer the childs question definitively, but I haven’t found that interview that everyone is talking about yet.

      I’m going to do more research before I rewatch the movie I think and try and figure out how Canon the other entries into the series are first.

      Great excuse to go read a bunch of essays and analyzes and watch interviews about a movie and lore I love