See What Happens: The 5 Greatest Horror Movie Endings - Part 6
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See What Happens: The 5 Greatest Horror Movie Endings

In this modern era, horror movies tend to struggle when it comes to granting audiences a satisfying conclusion. Afraid that movie-goers will leave the theatre disappointed if they're not shocked or surprised up until the very last moment, modern horror flicks tend to force the same ending upon audiences over and over again. You know how it goes: after the terrifying events that took up two hours of your time, the characters have seemingly made it out alive. Oh, wait. Just seconds before the credits roll, the monster or demon or threat or whatever was plaguing them is back, presumably putting them through the paces again or just killing them off for lack of a better idea.
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1. The Thing (1982) (Dir. John Carpenter)

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After the shapeshifting alien known only as “The Thing” infiltrates an Antarctic research station and reduces it to nothing, killing the scientists and turning them against one another, the two remaining survivors – J.R. MacReady (Kurt Russell) and Childs (Keith David) – regroup outside. Weary, tired and no longer giving a shit about anything, the pair sit and try to work out which one of them (if any) is “The Thing.”

As they try to get a grip on this  – the inhospitable base flaming behind them – both men decide that they’ll never really know the answer. Instead, MacReady, shivering in the icy wind, says: “If we’ve got any surprises for each other, I don’t think we’re in much shape to do anything about it.” “What do we do?” Childs asks. “Why don’t we just… wait here for a little while?” McReady suggests. “See what happens.”

Childs lets out a little laugh, and the two men sit broken and exhausted opposite one another, eventually offering up a couple of delirious grins. At that point, Ennio Morricone’s brilliantly paranoid score eases in, as director John Carpenter cuts to a far-away shot of the station, leaving us, the audience, in exactly the same position as our remaining characters: inching to know what happens. The best bit, of course, is that we never really know, but Carpenter assures an ending that is both appropriate, tense and completely right for a story about mistaken identities. What’s more, “The Thing” might actually be dead… but how will these men ever learn to trust each other after everything that’s happened?

Agree or disagree with our choices for greatest horror movie endings? Let us know your own suggestions in the comments section below.


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