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The Thing is a 1982 American science fiction horror film directed by John Carpenter from a screenplay by Bill Lancaster.Based on the 1938 John W. Campbell Jr. novella Who Goes There?, it tells the story of a group of American researchers in Antarctica who encounter the eponymous "Thing", an extraterrestrial life-form that assimilates, then imitates, other organisms.
The Things won the 2011 Shirley Jackson Award for Best Short Story, [1] and was a finalist for the 2011 Hugo Award for Best Short Story, [2] the 2011 Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award, [3] and the 2011 BSFA Award for Best Short Fiction. [4] The audio version was a finalist for the 2010 Parsec Award for short fiction. [5]
Writing credits affect the career of writers, as well as their reputation and union membership. [1]Writers trade on the reputation of their name; John Howard Lawson, the first president of the Screen Writers Guild (SWG; now the Writers Guild of America, WGA), said that "a writer's name is his most cherished possession.
Spoilers below. If you made it to the end of the Squid Game season 2 finale, you might have been so stunned by the ending that you sat through the credits, frozen in shock.And in that case, you ...
Deadpool & Wolverine has one mid-credits montage (so, kind of a mid-credits scene), and then another proper credits scene at the very end. Credits Scene 1 (kinda): Hope You Had The Time Of Your Life
The Thing is a 2011 science fiction horror film directed by Matthijs van Heijningen Jr., written by Eric Heisserer, and starring Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Joel Edgerton, Ulrich Thomsen, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, and Eric Christian Olsen.
The Loki Season 2 Episode 1 post-credits scene finds Sylvie in a McDonalds in 1982 Oklahoma. Here's what the end credits scene means.
Post-credits scenes may have their origins in encores, an additional performance added to the end of staged shows in response to audience applause. [1] Opera encores were common practice in the 19th century, when the story was often interrupted so a singer could repeat an aria, but fell out of favor in the 1920s due to rising emphasis on dramatic storytelling rather than vocal performance.