
In 1880s Minnesota, the lives of three Norwegian sisters are disrupted by the arrival of a mysterious stranger on their prairie farm. When the eldest sister invites him in to care for her ailing sibling, she unknowingly allows a supernatural presence to enter their home, testing the sisters’ trust and challenging their understanding of the world around them.
Does Who Goes There? have end credit scenes?
No!
Who Goes There? does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
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Who is the assistant commander that leads the effort to identify and eliminate the alien threat?
McReady
Connant
Garry
Blair
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Read the complete plot summary of Who Goes There?, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
At a remote Antarctic research station, as winter slips toward its end, the Outcast The Outcast leads a small group including Ingrid Ingrid, Ada Ada, and Liv Liv through the routine grind of cold-weather science. Their routine is upended when they uncover a buried alien spacecraft frozen in the ice, a relic that had crash-landed twenty million years earlier. In a misguided attempt to thaw the interior, they use a thermite charge, only to witness the magnesium hull flare into a fierce blaze and the vessel itself be consumed. From the ice they retrieve a single alien creature, a being the researchers believe was thrashing for heat when it finally froze, and they awaken something that does not belong to their world.
The thawing revives a creature that can assume the form, memories, and personality of any living organism it consumes, while preserving its own body mass for future reproduction. It moves with unsettling ease, and its first act is terrifying: it kills and then imitates Connant, the station’s physicist. With only scraps of matter left, the Thing attempts to masquerade as a sled dog, but the team detects the ruse and destroys the transformed animal midway through its change. The crisis spirals into something far more personal and dangerous as Blair, the pathologist who had pushed for thawing the Thing, descends into paranoia and guilt. He becomes convinced that he must kill everyone at the base to save mankind, and he is sealed away in a locked cabin at their outpost. Connant is also quarantined as a precaution, and a harsh, escalating “rule-of-four” is established where every crew member must be watched by three others.
Realizing they must isolate their base, the survivors shut down their airplanes and vehicles and maintain false calm in all radio transmissions to avoid attracting rescue or attention. They confront the harrowing possibility that the Thing could be hiding in plain sight among them, ready to imitate a human and escape into the wider world. The team discovers that the Thing is not merely a mimic but a telepath, able to read minds and project thoughts, complicating every decision and turning trust into a scarce resource. A sled dog is involved in a cruel experiment—involving human blood injections—intended to test for a human-immunity serum, a method borrowed from laboratory rabbits. The initial test on Connant proves inconclusive: the animal sample appears to have both human and alien blood, suggesting that either Copper or Garry may already be the Thing in disguise.
Assistant commander McReady takes control and pushes a ruthless deduction: almost every animal—except the test dog—has become an imitation. In a tense and grim sequence, they electrocute and burn the corpses of the other animals to prevent further contamination. Paranoia tightens its grip as suspicion accumulates, but the group knows they must press on together to stay alive. The cook, Kinner, is murdered, and his true nature is revealed to be a Thing, heightening the sense that the threat is intimate and pervasive. McReady concludes that even the tiniest fragments of the creature can function as independent organisms, and he devises a chilling test: blood samples from each man are heated briefly and exposed to a heated wire. If the blood recoils, the donor is a Thing—and one by one, fourteen men, including Connant and Garry, are exposed as impostors.
With two-thirds of the crew now revealed as imitations, the remaining members hurry to Blair’s cabin. On the way, they sight the first albatross of the Antarctic spring, a stark omen of possible contamination, and they shoot it to stop any Thing from hitching a perilous ride to civilization. When they reach Blair, the awful truth emerges: he is another Thing, able to slip through doors and corridors by reshaping himself at will. With the Thing(s) having free rein inside the base, the group extinguishes the immediate danger and returns to the task of containment. They finally kill the Blair-Thing in the snow, exposing what appears to be the last of the impostors left in the station.
In the aftermath, the surviving trio discovers that the Blair-Thing had been on the brink of completing a dangerous project: the construction of a nuclear-powered anti-gravity device that could have let the Thing escape to the outside world. The base is finally cleared of the immediate threats, but the looming possibility that the alien could still find a way to reach civilization remains a chilling reminder of how perilously close they came to losing their humanity to a merciless, shape-shifting foe.
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