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The Thing (1982 film)
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===Post-production=== Several scenes in the script were omitted from the film, sometimes because there was too much dialogue that slowed the pace and undermined the suspense. Carpenter blamed some of the issues on his directorial method, noting that several scenes appeared to be repeating events or information. Another scene featuring a snowmobile chase pursuing dogs was removed from the shooting script as it would have been too expensive to film. One scene present in the film, but not the script, features a monologue by MacReady. Carpenter added this partly to establish what was happening in the story and because he wanted to highlight Russell's heroic character after taking over the camp. Carpenter said that Lancaster's experience writing ensemble pieces did not emphasize single characters. Since ''Halloween'', several horror films had replicated many of the scare elements of that film, something Carpenter wanted to move away from for ''The Thing''. He removed scenes from Lancaster's script that had been filmed, such as a body suddenly falling into view at the Norwegian camp, which he felt were too clichéd.{{sfn|Bauer|1999}} Approximately three minutes of scenes were filmed from Lancaster's script that elaborated on the characters' backgrounds.{{sfn|Abrams|2016}} A scene with MacReady absentmindedly inflating a [[Sex doll|blow-up doll]] while watching the Norwegian tapes was filmed but was not used in the finished film. The doll would later appear as a [[jump scare]] with Nauls. Other scenes featured expanded or alternate deaths for various characters. In the finished film, Fuchs' charred bones are discovered, revealing he has died offscreen, but an alternate take sees his corpse impaled on a wall with a shovel. Nauls was scripted to appear in the finale as a partly assimilated mass of tentacles, but in the film, he simply disappears.{{sfn|Lambie|2017a}} Carpenter struggled with a method of conveying to the audience what assimilation by the creature meant. Lancaster's original set piece of Bennings' death had him pulled beneath a sheet of ice by the Thing, before resurfacing in different areas in various stages of assimilation. The scene called for a set to be built on one of Universal's largest stages, with sophisticated hydraulics, dogs, and flamethrowers, but it was deemed too costly to produce.{{sfn|Cohen|2011e}} A scene was filmed with Bennings being murdered by an unknown assailant, but it was felt that assimilation, leading to his death, was not explained enough. Short on time, and with no interior sets remaining, a small set was built, Maloney was covered with [[K-Y Jelly]], orange dye, and rubber tentacles. Monster gloves for a different creature were repurposed to demonstrate partial assimilation.{{sfn|Lambie|2017a}}{{sfn|Cohen|2011e}} Carpenter filmed multiple endings for ''The Thing'', including a "happier" ending because editor Todd Ramsay thought that the bleak, [[nihilism|nihilistic]] conclusion would not test well with audiences. In the alternate take, MacReady is rescued and given a blood test that proves he is not infected.{{sfn|Menzies|2017}}{{sfn|Mahon|2018}} Carpenter said that stylistically this ending would have been "cheesy".{{sfn|Bauer|1999}} Editor [[Verna Fields]] was tasked with reworking the ending to add clarity and resolution. It was finally decided to create an entirely new scene, which omitted the suspicion of Childs being infected by removing him completely, leaving MacReady alone.{{sfn|Bauer|1999}} This new ending tested only slightly better with audiences than the original, and the production team agreed to the studio's request to use it.{{sfn|Cohen|2011f}}{{sfn|Whittaker |2014}} It was set to go to print for theaters when the producers, Carpenter, and executive Helena Hacker decided that the film was better left with ambiguity instead of nothing at all. Carpenter gave his approval to restore the ambiguous ending, but a scream was inserted over the outpost explosion to posit the monster's death.{{sfn|Bauer|1999}}{{sfn|Cohen|2011f}} Universal executive [[Sidney Sheinberg]] disliked the ending's nihilism and, according to Carpenter, said, "Think about how the audience will react if we see the [Thing] die with a giant orchestra playing".{{sfn|Bauer|1999}}{{sfn|Whittaker |2014}} Carpenter later noted that both the original ending and the ending without Childs tested poorly with audiences, which he interpreted as the film simply not being heroic enough.{{sfn|Bauer|1999}}
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