an invocation of the sensually gothic    
     
   
 
2006 | 2007
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May Days 2006
 
1 Brian Froud
2 Transylvanian Desserts
3 Alex Proyas' Dark City
4 Edwardian Macabre: The Stories of Saki
5 The Blood Countess, Erzsabet Bathory
6 Sleepy Hollow: a legend you can visit!
7 H.P. Lovecraft's 'Dagon'
8 The Legacy of Creepy Magazine
9 The Evolving Horror of 'The Thing'
10 The Black Dahlia
11 'Prohibited:' The Erotic Art of Luis Royo
12 Christa Faust's Control Freak
13 Topping From Below by Laura Reese
14 The Fourth Tower of Inverness
15 Chad Michael Ward's BLACK RUST
16 Farinelli, il Castrato
17 The Master of All Desires
18 The Art of D.W. Frydendall
19 Audition: The Cinema of Takashi Miike
20 Halo: The Effect of the Killer App
21 Clive Barker's Tortured Souls
22 The Gothic Cathedral Organ
23 Nunsploitation: Sinful Sisters
24 The Art of Franz Von Stuck
25 The Jacket
26 Buckle Magazine: strap it on
27 The Art of Crab Scrambley
28 The Art of Gris Grimly
29 The Mediaeval Baebes
30 The Halfway House
31 Macabre Mealtime Recipes
 
 
May 9, 2006
 
Who Goes There? The Evolving Horror of 'The Thing'

In 1934, John W. Campbell published one of the most chilling and influential science fiction stories ever written: the novella, Who Goes There?

A remote scientific research expedition at the North Pole is invaded by a monstrous alien: a cunning shape-changer who assumes the forms of those it destroys. Soon it is among the expedition, killing and replacing them one by one.

Who Goes There? had an autobiographical impetus: Campbell´s mother and aunt were identical twins who enjoyed the "game" of substituting for one another in his care as a young child, confusing him again and again with false identity. It was his susceptibility to masquerade and his terror at the game which funneled into this greatest of his works.

In 1951, the first film version of the story was made, and although classic in its own way, it's a very loose adaptation with none of the shape-shifting elements of the original idea.

It was John Carpenter who captured the gripping horror of the tale in his 1982 version.

 
The Story on DVD / Images from The Thing (1982)

John Carpenter's The Thing is unrelenting in its sense of dread, suspense and mystery. Special effects master Rob Bottin created the nightmarish 'morphing' scenes without the aid of modern CG, and the results are still terrifying.

An annual tribute to the film is held at Thing-Fest in Ontario, Canada. Visit www.outpost31.com to learn more about this event and about The Thing.
 
 
           
 
 
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