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When Aliens Invade: 8 Great Invasion Movies

The alien invasion scenario is a common one in cinema – and for good reason. If movies are a mirror, reflecting social anxieties and regrets, then the alien invasion trope is one of the most adaptable allegories imaginable. For decades, filmmakers have used it to discuss military policies, fear of technology and concern over environmental abuses. Our scientific progress as a species, in conflict with the moral progress of our conscience, and our natural fear of change, are all to be found in the alien invasion movie. There are three main types of cinematic alien invasion – each serving a different purpose – although variations and combinations do occasionally appear. These are Occupation, Infiltration and Raid.

The Thing (1982)

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With a considerably more gruesome take on the infiltration alien invasion movie, The Thing is directed by John Carpenter, from a screenplay by Bill Lancaster (The Bad News Bears).

Starring Kurt Russell, the story is based on the 1938 science fiction novella Who Goes There by John W. Campbell (writing as Don A. Stewart), and features a group of American researchers in Antarctica discovering that a Norwegian group has been decimated by an unseen force. They soon find that a parasitic alien lifeform – which assimilates and imitates other organisms – has infiltrated their isolated research station, and a severe storm is coming. Deep paranoia spreads quickly within the group as the alien absorbs their fellow researchers.

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Though The Thing has found something of a dedicated following in the years since its release, it was poorly received in cinemas in 1982. Its gory body horror, as the alien makes itself known, sets the film as something of an oddity – being a monster movie without a monster really visible in its own right.

The central theme is timeless, however – being about prevention of an apocalypse, as the team fight to contain the threat and to prevent it spreading to populated areas, where it would surely and quickly consume humanity.