How The Thing 1951 Terrified Audiences Without Any Gore

By Owen Quinn Copyright Photos

The B movie monster era of the 1950s is a goldmine full of classic movies, many of which have been remade at a later date.

When we think of The Thing, we always go straight to John Carpenter’s classic version but this is, in fact, one of the most famous 1950s B movie remakes: The Thing from Another World, based on the book Who Goes There?

The premise sees a crashed UFO and its occupant found buried in ice in the Antartica. While the members of the base accidentally blow the ship up, they manage to bring the block of ice with the alien into the base. A storm breaks out making communication with the military bosses nearly impossible. It isn’t long before the creature gets up, alive and well, and the soldiers, scientists and sole reporter find themselves locked in a battle to save themselves and the planet.

Now, in the 50s, there was no gore so given how John Carpenter took the premise and explanded it into the cult classic has roots here. The military men, led by Kenneth Tobey as Captain Patrick Henry, were jovial in nature while the scientific team seem overzealous to the point of loss of commonsense where the alien is concerned. Howard Hawks was a highly respected director of that era and knew exactly what he wanted. James Arness was cast as the monster. It was humanoid but with strange looking head make-up (Arness would go on to become a very successful western actor). So the script had to convey any horror going on.

I remeber as a child watching black and white movies and being terrified. And that is a testament to writers, directors and all involed as with no concept of gore, you need langage or visual tricks to make the audience buy they’re facing a deadly alien. One of the jumpscares is the simple open a door and something scary is behind it. When you see that moment, you are not expecting the creature to be there and when it tries to slash out at Henry, you jump. It roars but doesn’t speak and you have an enemy that is immune to the cold because of its plant biology. But there within lies the answer to destroying it.

The alien here needs blood to survive. It visually reminded people of a Frankenstein’s monster type of beast compared to the mindblowing practical effects of the John Carpenter version. There are very few original movies that match their remake/sequel in quality but the Thing from Another World falls into this category. You have the same ‘base under seige’ mentality in both movies. It is a fight for survival with Earth being at stake.

With an icy tomb outside and alien threat in and out of the base, stakes are high. Not even the scientists can be fully trusted. Dr Carrington is more interested in the wisdom he will gain from the alien. All he’s interested in is the secrets he can learn from it and while his intentions are well intentioned, sort of, his execution leaves a lot to be desired. In the climax, he almost gets everyone killed by cutting off the power of their electrical trap before being attacked by the alien.

The most freaky scene in the movie is when they are figuring out what the alien is. They have seen it fight the huskies, smashing them to the ground like breadsticks. One dog tears its arm off and they are examining it. It seems to be a plant, a super carrot if you will. The carrot comparison is to make the audience less frightened by the fact it needs us to live. This automatically makes the audience think this alien is orange coloured. They further cement it in the minds of the audience by drawing to the fact that there are many plants on Earth that hunt mammals and very successfully. Imagine your pot plant growing a mouth and legs and coming after you. It’s not something you would think of as a possibility but upon watching the Thing, it becomes a reality you were never aware of, furthering making this movie a reality in people’s heads. The hand begins to move. It has gone from frozen to room tempersature, absorbing the dog blood it was covered in. So the script had to convey any horror going on.

It produces seeds which Carrington has planted and secretly fed blood too. When he reveals it to the scientists, he has a tray of human plants that feed on blood. As with the alien using human cells in John Carpenter’s to spread, seeds seem to be its way here. In none of the movies do we an answer about the alien’s origins but that only adds to the sudience making up their own images. Dr Carrington has been secretly feeding the samples blood which they are growing on.

These aliens are breathing, the young plants crying like newborns. The thirst of science overrules all including common sense given that one scientist reminds tham what one of these aliens can do, then imagine a thousand. The alien could be here to colonise the Earth which can only be done by killing anything with blood, starting with the base personnel. Henry burns Carrington’s experiments before they become a threat.

Those words made the audience conjure up their own nightmares. The alien looked like a man yet was able to take out, string up and drain two grown men of their blood. Henry compares it to a slaughterhouse. We only get a glimpse of something hairy fall out of a storage bin. It is what is left of one of the dogs, shrunken and drained.

But the true horror is off screen. Two huskies have been drained dry but the more horrifying part is the reveal of two scientists are found hanging upside dowm, also fed on their blood. It’s predator style 1950s but off screen. We have seen how that looked but for audiences in those days it would have been left to their imaginations. One of the doctors was there when they were attacked but fell, smashing his head. He tells them he felt an ice cold draught, Olsen and Arbuck screaming. When he awoke, they were hanging upside down with their throats cut. Add that to the state of the dog found in the storage bin, you get a horrible vision of a human after being drained. Hearing it from the mouth of one of the character makes it real because of their reaction. The audience is now invested in these characters so are there with them subconsciously.

It is established this alien has no nervous ystem, no heart, no nerve endings. It reproduces without sex or emotion which Carrington is envious of. Its arm was ripped off but it grew a new one very rapidly and we get to see a true demonstration of its strength when it smashes its way into a rec room. They set it on fire and it runs through a wall into the snow screaming. Its scream is inhuman further reminding the audience that this is an alien even though it’s an actor made up.

The build up to this was cleverly done. They can track the creature with a radiation counter. As they countdown, it means it is getting closer. Suddenly the lights go out. They are in darkness and the alien throws the door open, illuminated by the outside light, smothering it in shadow to make it scarier. They set it on fire with gasoline.

James Cameron would use a similar tracking trick in Aliens to even greater effect years later. Seeing the set in flames with this giant smashing through walls is still impressive when viewed and has been emulated in the Thing remake. It lashes out at them before jumping through a window into the snow. It is freezing them out, again showing it is an intelligent creature with a plan. It knows its enemy. Keeping the monster in shadow is a classic tool used to this day and, most notabley, by Ridley Scott in Alien. There is a Frankenstein’s monster element to the Thing as seen best in the final scenes where they are trying to lure it into their electrical trap so they can fry it. Frankenstein’s monster was already a familair figure of horro for the audience so that similarity would generate horror.

James Arness was a big guy so is perfect for the Thing. Standing at six foot seven and a half inches tall, he went on to find global fame in the twenty year long running Western series, Gunsmoke. He is as synonymous with Matt Dillon as William Shatner is with Captain Kirk. But for me, he will always be the iconic monster from The Thing from Another World. Hawks brought to life a story of isolation and terror with tricks never before seen by audiences. And I like the fact there is no on screen gore. It makes it scarier just as the first Halloween had no blood in it for the kills. And if you think about it, the Carpenter reboot wasn’t a gore fest either; just scares and paranoia built on jump scares and practical effects never before seen by an audience. Hitchcock had the same gift for tension and scares because he used the tools around him to the utmost effect; the actors, the script, special effects department and lighting. The rest is pure imagination.

Absolute classic.

TW Meets Torchwood’s Naoko Mori aka Tosh

By Owen Quinn author

Out of the many shows I like, Torchwood is one of those where you would like to
meet the entire cast. So far, I have met Gwen, Ianto and Rhys and on Saturday 18th
Jaanuary 2024, I ticked another from my list and a very much anticipated one.
Naoko Mori played tech wizard Tosh for two seasons before being killed off along with
Owen in probably one of the best dramatic episodes of any show or in the history of
the entire Whoniverse.

She had first appeared In Doctor Who episode, Aliens of London as a scientist investigating the spacepig crashlanding that took out Big Ben.
She would tell us that it was just another acting job and that she was told had no
connection to her character Tosh. But in fact, just as the Doctor and Rose meeting a
maid in old Wales that was the double of Gwen Cooper, did the writers actually tie it
all together. It would be revealed in her death scene that she was in fact covering for
Owen who had a hangover that day.

Both my son and I are huge Torchwood fans and we were not disappointed. Naoko is
by far one of the most interesting and talkative celebrities that I’ve ever met. To say
that she left a lasting impression on me and especially my son, would be an
understatement. She was so approachable and happily chatted away about the
show and the impact their deaths had. Looking back we can see that the third season
of Torchwood was the five part Children of Earth so was she killed off because the
producers knew the show wasn’t coming back as full seasons? She didn’t know but
was interested in the reaction to the shock value of her death on my son who did not know it was coming.
While doing our photoshoots, she took a great interest in my son’s Japanese logoed
jumper and she told him the meaning behind the tiger logo. They got on like a house
on fire.
Naoko Mori is just a pleasure to meet and engage with. She has a genuine interest in
fans and as demonstrated with my son, takes the conversation and interest beyond
her time on Torchwood.

Awesome lady.

TW meets Sophie Aldred, the 7th Doctor’s Ace

By Owen Quinn author

It was a bloody cold Saturday morning on 18th January 2024 when I next met Sophie
Aldred. Sophie played the 7th Doctor’s companion, Ace in the final days of the classic series. She has done many Big Finish audio plays and special appearances as Ace. She finally returned in Jodie Whittaker’s final story, The Power of the Doctor. This time however I had my son with me who, as a kid, loved the 7th Doctor era and
now he was getting to meet Ace. He had already met Sylvester McCoy a few years ago as a kid and was totally starstruck but now as a 20 year old man, he had plenty to chat about with Sophie.

I first met her at a Nebula con in the Aldelphi Hotel in Liverpool for a ‘Curse of Fenric’
event and we have met several times over the years, including Belfast. The only
photo I ever got with her was over a table so this was my chance to get a proper
photo done.

Sophie was as nice as ever. She has a genuine interest in her fans and spent ages
talking to my son about her era, especially Remembrance of the Daleks. He got a
photo of her and Sylvester from that story signed. She told us it was one she had
only recently discovered and got printed for conventions for signing. We talked about
her return to the show for Power of the Doctor and if ever there was a great spin off
just waiting to be done, it was her working alongside UNIT.

We talked about how generational Doctor Who was and just how strong the 7th
Doctor stories were to the point we are still talking about them and buying the action
figures, e.g the Emperor Davros was released before Christmas and I bought it
because a) it’s a great figure and b) it evokes great memories of that story.

So we had our photoshoots and again had the opportunity to chat. It was a day of
bucket list moments because my son and I got what we wanted and more because
Sophie took the time to chat and more so listen to us. Meeting celebrities can be hit or miss but Sophie Aldred is a total hit.

Behind The Story The Time Warriors When Angels Burn

By and copyright of Owen Quinn

Any writer will tell you that the germ of an idea often turns into something completely different. Also, that you may have a germ of an idea but it may take a while to put it into a coherent story. This was the case with When Angels Burn.

It was going to be called Curse of Lake Damon. It was something my son had an idea about as a child. Damon means demon in German. He envisioned a dark lake with creatures made of mist rising from the surface. This sayed with me for a few years before I began to put it all together.

As a Time Warriors story, it would go either the supernatural way or the sci fi way. I then got an idea of a young woman in a rowing boat at night who suddenly dissolves when a strange whispering reaches a crescendo. So I had a whispering lake, ghosts in the woods and there wa no other way round it, there was something alien at the bottom of the lake. I had two other ideas; a young mute boy screaming out in the night and a Persian kid sitting on a frozen vista before a floating fire. A figure approaches him and hands him what looks like a Doubloon and tells him “When Angels Burn.”

I needed a way in different from the usual stumbling into or being dragged into a story. This time I used Rachel’s fake memories given to her by the Ganti when they made her human as a doorway. What if Rachel had memories of this boy and the whispering lake? But she only had fragments so that was the central mystery.

So many images and ideas but how to put them all together? Little did I know that it would become a story about loss and grief for both bumans and Xerebans.

it wasn’t until I saw the image of the alien, the Galantufeen, my most exotic named alien to date and then it all fell into place.

Writing a series like the Time Warriors, you begin to develop your own universe and mythos. So the chance to bring Xereba back into the story was impossible to resist. It was also a chance to reaffirm the Time Warriors as a team and expand on them all as characters. I liked the Vienna backdrop as you want to see the world.

But I fear I have said too much. If you want to see how it all comes together check out The Time Warriors When Angels Burn & Other Stories now on sale on Amazon in both paperback and kindle.

TW Meets 5th Doctor Companion Janet Fielding aka Tegan Jovenka

Just as Tegan complained when she returned in the 13th Doctor final story, Power of the Doctor, that it had been nearly four decades since she had last heard from the Doctor, so it was for me when I met up with Janet Fielding in Lisburn for a comic con on 6th September 2025.

In my case, it had been an Ace situation, nearly three decades for me. We had last met at Panopticon in the Imperial College London back in the 80s. She was doing a panel with her Doctor, Peter Davison and fellow companion, Sarah Sutton who played Nyssa.

I asked a simple question, what was your favourite cliffhanger? For some reason, that pissed them off. Janet summoned me on stage where she threatened to throw a jug of water over me. I never understood why and that put me right off this tardis crew as the most unpleasant I had met.

I have never met Sarah Sutton again but I did meet Peter davison a few times. But all I had of Tegan was a black and white 10 x 8 of Janet which I bought on the day for three quid back then.

This time I wanted a photo with her and got a Doctor Who comic book signed.

It’s one of my favourite signatures to be honest. Janet was absolutely lovely. She didn’t want to drench me this time. We chatted about her return to the show and keeping it secret. Her time on the show and her era. We also talked about her time representing other actors and how the Dublin scene has decliend a bit. We had a great time chatting and I was so caught up, I forgot to get my photo so had to go back and tick that off the bucket list.

The fifth Doctor era is a favourite of mine and I am glad that I got her once again but also the fifth Doctor that day too.

Great memories.

TW Meets Star Trek’s John De Lancie

By and copyright Owen Quinn

Who doesn’t love Q from Star Trek? And who doesn’t love the stylish, eloquent John De Lancie?

I first met John many moons ago in Dublin at a small convention. He was open, affable, delightful and a genuine gentleman. As I said elsewhere, fans got very lucky at Dublin Comic Con Summer Edition 2025. I had lost my autograph of John so had to go to get one again.

John once wrote a Star Trek The Next Generation comic for DC comics called The Gift. The cover remains to this day, stunning as you can see below.

So this time when we met, I had an original copy and handed it to him to be signed. He cheekily asked should he write all over Patrick Stewart’s head so I said yeah.

John has that cheeky chappie grin that cemented him in Star Trek fans heart from the minute he appeared on screen. While we are both older, he still has it as you can see from the photo above.

He can hold an audience as his panel showed and just as it was years ago, he still can hold the fans in the palm of his hand. He is interested in fans and their lives, asking a friend of mine what hi did as a profession. When he said that he was a podiatrist, they had a discussion about private and public health care. We had a chat about diabetes and how insidious it is.

Meeting him tied in with his surprise appearance on Star Trek Strange New Worlds as the father of Trelane. While it may have broken continuity, a bit, it was a delight to at least, hear him on Trek once again.

He just has to smile at you once with that mischievous twinkle in the eye and you know Q is alive and well. A true gentleman.

Mistress of Darkness set for Dublin Comic Con Summer 2026

The Mistress of the Dark herself is coming to Dublin!
We’re thrilled to announce Cassandra Peterson, the iconic Elvira, as a guest at Dublin Comic Con – Summer Edition this August!
Best known as the legendary horror host Elvira, Mistress of the Dark, Cassandra Peterson has become a true pop-culture icon across film, television, comics, and beyond.

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 This is an extremely rare convention appearance.
Cassandra has not appeared at a European convention since 2017, and even before then, her appearances were few and far between.
This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for fans to meet the Queen of Halloween right here in Dublin.

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 August 8–9, 2026

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 Photos | 

✍️

 Autographs | 

🎤

 Panels

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 Get your tickets at DublinComicCon.com

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 Photoshoots available now

✍️

 Autographs available on the day or pre purchase with fast track

Brought to you by Comic Con Ireland – Est. 2013
#DublinComicCon#DCCSummerEdition#comicconireland#Elvira#CassandraPeterson#MistressOfTheDark#RareAppearance

Clown in a Cornfield Podcast Review

We’re not big fans of corn fields between Children of the Corn, Signs and every other horror movie set in a field with plants higher than your head so we go visit Clown in a Cornfield to see can we beat that fear. Clowns? In a cornfield? A huge twist that will send you running. Stephen Carey and Owen Quinn check out if clowns will ever get a good rap.

Join the craic. You won’t look back!

Behind The Story; The Time Warriors To Meet In Dreams

By and copyright of Owen Quinn

Virtually every sci-fi show has done a body swap episode.

With the Time Warriors, I try to make every story as original as possible without falling into old tropes. And if you do a story which has been done so many times before, then how could I make it different?

So for To Meet In Dreams, I wanted something different than an alien device or teleport accident. I couldn’t really see the benefit or story if any of the Time Warriors switched bodies with each other.

I was familair with the concept of astral travelling so thought that maybe that would be a good device with which to make the body swap happen. It was always going to Jacke who was having a hard time after her split with Stephen at the climax of the Wolves of Chernobyl & Other Stories. But why would someone be swapping bodies?

I look around at the world where kids literally live in their phones and are losing the art of handwriting and painting and drawing with the advent of AI. One area we avoid is the future where Varran is afraid to go for fear of finding out something that could affect the present day. So I decided that we should see a possible future leading to the immortal line,

“Open your mouth and I’ll rip your balls off!”

That should really be a T-shirt.

But I still needed a new slant on body swap. It’s very easy to shoehorn characters into stories like a certain ethnicity or disabled etc but for this one, it was an ideal opportunity to have a little person as the bad guy who isn’t really a bad guy at all. It allowed me to explore the fact he gets to experience the world as a normal person while Jacke learns how hard it is to be disabled, even in the future.

Professor Eric Talman is a genius in his era, married with a husband, but he is desperate to bring back the art of handwriting and painting which has virtually all died out. And he has pinpointed the era where it all went wrong and he wants to change that. What do you do when you discover you have swapped bodies with a time traveller whose binman is desperate for a date.

It was time for Jacke to get over Stephen and the introduction of Deano the Muay Thai binman feels right for Jacke and the series as a whole.

But unable to reverse Talman’s body swap, will Jacke be trapped in a little person’s body in the future with no help from Tyran’s descendants? What will this mean for Talman’s husband, Mervin? What does it mean for their marriage?

To Meet In Dreams is a chance to revisit an old very used scenario through new eyes. It is also a chance to break the no visits to the future rule and expand the Time Warriors mythos. In dark times, life has a way of pushing you in the direction you need as Jacke discovers.

Find out in When Angels Burn & Other Stories now available in paperback and kindle on Amazon.

TW Flashback Stargate Atlantis: The Rising

By Owen Quinn author of the Time Warriros and Zombie Blues

With Stargate SG1 a runaway success, it was only a matter of time before a spin off series was released. This came in the form of Stargate Atlantis which grew organically from the show’s own mythos.

The pilot starts off at the Ancient outpost in the Antarctica where the final battle against Anubis took place. Doctor Elizabeth Weir has been recruiting for this mission for months and Jack O’Neill (Richard Dean Anderson) and Daniel Jackson (Michael Shanks) are there to help see them off. Jack is flown in by pilot John Sheppard who just discovers the secrets of the existence of the Stargate project. Wandering around the base he meets the rest of his fellow travellers. The comedic duo of the series, Stargate’s guest star super complainer, genius and ever grumpy, Rodney McKay (David Hewlett) and Doctor Carson Beckett (Paul McGillion) are arguing because Carson has an Ancient gene that can control the great weapon hidden at the Antarctic and any Ancient tech. But he struggles to do it while Sheppard discovers it works naturally for him bringing him to Weir’s attention.

Thanks to Jack’s persuasion, Sheppard goes along. You can see the chemistry between this new team is right there from the start. It flows perfectly giving the audience the desire to go along with these people to what may be a one way ticket. Daniel is desperate to go but Jack refuses to let him go because he discovered that the gate can open up to eight symbols. This means that he believes that flying city of Atlantis lies at the other end but so far away that the expedition need to find ZMPs (a kind of crystalline super battery) at the other end. Unless the Atlantis crew find them then they cannot contact Earth or go home.

Torri Higginson is the perfect leader who got the job against military advice. She is joined by Robert Patrick as Colonel Sumner as they make the trip to a dark city. But once there danger is never far. Add in Aiden Ford as Sheppard’s new buddy played by Rainbow Sun Francks and our team are good to go.

With a brand new unexplored galaxy comes a brand new enemy and this one is more terrifying then the Goa’uld.

They find the city under the ocean and the shield keeping them safe is starting to fail because the city is reacting to their presence. Sheppard leads a small team to find a safe haven in case Rodney fails. But all he finds is a settlement of humans haunted by the shadow of the Wraith. Children are taught to not live in fear, they play games dressed as Wraith and new ally and final member of the new team, Teyla (Rachel Lutrell) shows Sheppard hieroglyphs that detail the story.

There is always a number of Wraith in existence Teyla tells Sheppard. She tells him that the Wraith defeated the Ancients centuries ago and again in Before I Sleep, we see this first-hand as the Ancients submerge Atlantis as they are powerless against the sheer millions of Wraith that want Atlantis for themselves. But they hibernate, allowing humans to breed over generations. Once a few centuries have passed the Wraith rise from hibernation and begin culling the human herds. They can make you see things that are not there making you fire your weapons betraying their victim’s location. They are hunters and when the village is attacked by two dart ships coming through the Stargate, Sheppard learns the ships can teleport their victims aboard keeping them in energy form until being reconstituted in the feeding cells. They also make you think you are seeing things and those effects of things running through the dark forest are effective.

Several people are taken including Sumner and Teyla. But any rescue is thwarted when when the city’s shields collapse but instead of drowning there is a power surge and Atlantis rises to the surface.

The real significance of this will not become clear to any of them until the episode Before I Sleep when they find a second Weir who watched them all die when the shields fell.

Weir and Sheppard argue over the rescue but Sheppard gets his way and takes a team to rescue the others. The village second in command is played by Christopher Heyerdahl who would later play recurring Wraith ally when it suits him Todd.

The spooky set up for the Wraiths pays off in spades when we discover three different kinds. There are the burly masked guards that are the foot soldiers. They follow the orders of a Wraith supervisor and the final one is the Queen, a serpentine like vampire creature. Sumner learns that these Wraith are the guardians for all the others who are in hibernation protecting them until there are sufficient humans for the awakening. Even their furniture seems gothic, and to his horror, she uses her mind manipulation to make Sumner give her the name of Earth. The wraith are beautifully designed and a stark difference from the Goa’uld. The body movements of the Queen are snake like but so like those of a classic vampire.

But the true nature of the Wraith is revealed to Sumner. As the Queen gloats, they don’t need their food to agree with them. She slams her hand, palm open onto his chest and begins to drain the life force right of Sumner aging him to death. But Sheppard puts a bullet in him to give him some form of dignity in death. The team set off explosives which cause the hibernation to start long before it was due to. Like a vampire, Sheppard stakes the Queen before they rescue the others.

If you ever wanted a formidable enemy then it’s the Wraith. As if they weren’t scary enough, our heroes have no backup from Earth. And will this cause them adversity from the humans that live here because they are now on the menu. Carson does an autopsy on what is left of one of them and his results show Wraith tissue is in a state of constant regeneration making them very old and very hard to kill.

There we have it. A powerful first episode that sets up our stay for the next five years in the Pegasus Galaxy. We have a new team that gel from the get go. We have the thread that they have no way home. We have an alien threat that may well be the source of vampires from our legends. All they have is what they brought from Earth, the secrets of Atlantis and their own bravery and their new friends in the form of Teyla and her villagers who are offered refuge aboard Atlantis.

The design of Atlantis is beautiful and realised to house great set pieces which would come to the fore later in the series. The sequence of it rising from the bottom of the ocean is thrilling and that matte shot of it sitting in the ocean with the wake echoing out across the ocean is done with great care. And that’s what I love about this two-part opener; the writers, designers, producers and all care about this product and making it top notch viewing as it all comes together.

This is a show that has been well thought out and put together in a thrilling rmultilayered ride that we don’t fully realise until later episodes.

Enjoy these episodes because by season three we start the down ward spiral because of poor writing decisions and behind the scenes contract issues. But as it stands The Rising is one of the best episodes of the Stargate franchise which still holds up today.