So while Mr. Black pondered The Thing, he realized there are others out there like it. That is, other films about a body-possessing alien entity trapped inside an isolated space with a few unfortunate souls about to die. Turns out there are loads of them. So let’s do a quick review for those of you looking for something a little less iconic. Please note, we are talking about sending the Crew into a confined, remote, godforsaken place, so no Invasion of the Body Snatchers. If you can leave town in the family station wagon, it is off the list, so no The Blob. Also, we aren’t looking at the remake. It is not a terrible film, but adds little to this discussion.
So old school it lost it’s color! |
First up is the original, The Thing from Another World. Mr. Black still gets goosebumps every time he watches the scene where they discover the ship. While it lacks a body possessing thing, it does have an evil scientist determined to grow and feed the thing at any cost. It also has that square-jawed broad-shouldered All-American jingoism that is generally lacking in the rest of these films, and Shadowrun in general. For most of us, this attitude is lacking in the world. But if you wanted to show some soul-tired Runners a glimpse of what working in a mega is like (that smiling happy can-do attitude, mixed with unbearable confidence and xenophobia: “Gee mister, of course Ares is the best in the world! Together we can do anything, even save the world! Let’s go pin the ears back on those EVO commies”)
And since we are starting Old School, Quatermass and the Pit, AKA 5 Million Years to Earth, gives us locust-like aliens, using their ancient literal hive mind to kill any human without a strand of the alien’s DNA! While this sounds dodgy, this British Trideography Picture heavily inspired generations of sci-fi directors, John Carpenter included, and Mark Gatiss of Doctor Who fame. Mr. Black recalls being creeped out by it as a child. It goes for a black-and-white, movie time news vibe. And it’s protagonist Professor Quatermass, would make an excellent scholarly NPC, a classic cardigan wearing, pipe smoking square jawed academic, with a mustache that could cure cancer. If we need someone to lead the Crew to our facility to find out what has gone wrong, he’s our man...
Insect spirits, or the Devil? You decide... |
Mitsuhama goons escort Mr. Johnson and his impressive mustache away... |
Annihilation explores a similar theme, but adds in mutated creatures, and “the Shimmer”, an energy field of some kind that is keeping the thing in. Perhaps the insect spirits have set up a hive, and are flesh possessing animals? What do you have when a piasma and an insect spirit aren’t tough enough for your Crew? How about a possessed half piasma/half behemoth? Mr. Black is not sure even he has enough gun for that…
The Reanimator is considered one of the best Lovecraft adaptations. It lacks the isolation snd claustrophobia of the other trideos discussed, but Mr. Black mentions it here because The Reanimator may be the best depiction of what happens when scientists mess with death and start summoning shedim…
This is when the Crew will start to suspect something has gone wrong... |
...and when they know it has all gone dreadfully wrong. |
Though shedim may be at the heart of Event Horizon. It features the Distress Call Lure, There is Another Monster and Failing Life Support, ramping up the distress. Whether you look at this as a shedim infestation, or an Astral Outbreak Event is up to you and the level of hell you are willing to inflict on your players…
The Void moves our location from Corp facility to a hospital. This has the benefit of confusing your players with a place that is supposed to help them, with a staff that wants to harm them. While sending your Crew to the isolation/quarantine wing of a Corp hospital is creepy enough, send them to a DocWagon Customer Wellness Center. Even after the mission is over, let them wonder if the terror and the things are the new normal for DocWagon…
Next up is Alien. While very similar in tone and pace to The Thing, the key difference is that the Corporation is actively trying to get the thing out. This concept is bad enough when you can’t trust anyone because they might be a thing, but knowing someone in the facility is trying to sabotage your efforts to survive and escape, and is actually trying to get you possessed, triples the terror.
Let’s cover the rest of the viable franchise while we are here. Aliens is the version after the thing has struck. This time the Crew’s job is rescue and retrieval, guns a-blazing. Little do they know how insidious is their “bug hunt” or that once again, the Corporation only cares about getting the thing back. This version gives your Crew all their toys and guns and bullets, and counters them with LOTS of things! Aliens also switches up our alliances. In Alien the Android is the traitor, here he is there to help, and a baby-faced Paul Reiser is our thing-loving traitor. (Never give your players the same traitor twice!)
Taken together, The Thing is an initial outbreak/infestation. But after review, the Corporation is excited about the results, and sends in another team. This is Alien, an unsuspecting team sent in to be hosts. This doesn’t work either, so this time the Corporation sends in a strike team, Aliens-style, to rescue a host at all costs. Do you dare run the same mission 3 times for your crew?
We will mercifully skip the rest of the series, except for Alien V Predator. While not a good film by any means, we can look at it from the perspective of another Corp finding out, and sending in their own team. After the first Corporation has sent in at least 3 research/rescue/Runner teams, there must be something useful in there. Perhaps the Crew is hired because of a special skill they have, e.g., mountaineering, arctic survival, jungle survival, LAV piloting, mushing (sled dog handling), etc. Find a skill on at least one of the character’s sheets that will help, and go. This new Corp could just be taking a gander, or it could be a smaller Corp looking to steal a leg up on the competition. It could be that Mr. Johnson is the one going with them. He may be looking for a fast promotion, hoping to bring whatever is in the facility to his corporate overlords. Or he could just be a rich day trader type, watching the fuel expenditures and airplane orders of the first Corporation. He realizes something is worth grabbing up there, and hires the team to take him and a couple of buddies/beancounters/bodyguards to the spot. He promises a cash payment and a share of whatever is in the facility, or whatever his Corp can make out of it, or shares in the new company he is hoping to bootstrap out of the discovery! Lots of angles to play here, and loads of ways to play this out. You take your picks, and the Crew takes their chances.
Next up, we take a jander under the sea...
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