Take the kids from
E.T. The Extraterrestrial, give one of them the sister from
Pretty in Pink, have one of them abducted by the Beast from
Poltergeist, and then put them all in the vicinity of the government facility from
Firestarter, next you put that all in a blender hit puree and the result is the latest
Netflix series
Stranger Things,
brought to us by the Duffer Brothers. This is an eight episode series
that is a clear homage to the works of Stephen King and Steven Spielberg
that will easily delight fans of those two artists, as well as several
other genre artists that
Matt and
Ross Duffer throw nods to.
The release model for the
Netflix
series is the real game changer with the medium as you can now watch a
series in whichever way best suits your needs; check out an episode a
week at a time or binge watch the whole thing in one sitting. I prefer
the latter in the case of
Stranger Things as for me it
worked best when considered as basically an eight hour movie. I really
enjoyed J.J. Abrams' love letter to Steven Spielberg with his film
Super 8, but I did find that the ending resolution was a tad weak and it felt rather rushed. Now with shows like
Stranger Things
a filmmaker can take more time with their characters, introduce
interesting plot threads, expand the world they’ve created, and all
without being worried about how many show times a theatre can fit in a
day.
This is how I watched it.
The
show opens with some standard science fiction thriller elements as we
see a scientist madly scrambling down a dark hallway while something
stalks him through the shadows, and in the classic Spielbergian method
we don’t see the creature just the horrific look on the poor sods face
as he’s grabbed by something off camera. Cut to a basement in small town
80s suburbia where the show’s true heroes are playing
Dungeon & Dragons; Mike Wheeler (
Finn Wolfhard) the stoic leader of the group, Dustin Henderson (
Gaten Matarazzo) the comic relief, Lucas Sinclair (
Caleb McLaughlin) the sensible one, and Will Byers (
Noah Schnapp) the boy who disappears that night while returning home from their heated gaming session.
Points for no one calling somebody “Penis Breath.”
Devastated by the disappearance of her son is Joyce Byers (
Wynona Ryder),
who seems to be going off her rocker as she insists that her son is
trying to contact her through the Christmas lights she strings all over
the house, but
we saw the creature chasing after young Will so
we know things aren’t as cut and dried as they appear and that she is
far from crazy. Her eldest son Jonathon Byers (
Charlie Heaton)
is a bit of a social outcast but it’s his search for his little brother
that throws him in contact with Mike’s teenage sister Nancy (
Natalia Dyer), whose best friend Barb (
Shannon Purser) has also gone missing, but surprisingly no one seems all that concerned about her.
Being the “Best Friend” is never a good gig in a horror show.
The
handling of Barb's disappearance is one of the weaker elements of the
show as she is introduced, hangs around for a couple of episodes and
then she is gone without a sense of anybody but Nancy being worried
about her. We get one shot of Nancy talking to Barb’s mother on the
phone but then the mother is never to be heard from again. This is the
80s and a teen-age girl vanishing would still be a big deal, no matter
how hard a shadowy government facility tried to cover it up. Chief Jim
Hopper (
David Harbour)
reluctantly gets involved with the investigation of the missing Byer’s
kid, he has serious emotional issues due to the loss of his own
daughter, but apparently daughters belonging to other people are not as
big of a concern to him so he doesn't give poor Barb a second thought.
Sheriff Brody he is not.
"We need a bigger donut."
Speaking of “
Shadowy Government”
it’s time to mention the show’s primary bad, and I don't mean the
monster in the dark that is snatching children from their homes, but a
monster of a more insidious nature, the Mad Scientist. Doctor Martin
Brenner (
Matthew Modine)
is your stock evil doctor and unfortunately the Duffer Brothers do
nothing to flesh out this stereotype, and rely mostly on Matthew
Modine's white hair to doing the work for them. One look at him and
you’d scream, “
Evil!” and run in the opposite direction. When he tells Nancy's mom to "
Trust him" I burst out laughing.
He’s a Mad Scientist with henchmen for Christ sake.
Not only does Dr. Brenner want to keep a lid on the whole “
A monster has escaped from our facility and is preying on the locals”
but he is searching for a second escapee who just so happens to be a
little girl with extraordinary powers. She is known only by her
designation “11” which is tattooed on her arm, and in case we hadn’t
quite got the gist of how evil Brenner is we learn that Eleven (
Millie Bobby Brown) is also
his
daughter, and she’s been treated as a lab experiment her entire life.
After escaping the facility, keeping just one step ahead of her father's
goons, she eventually runs into our group of young heroes who were out
hunting for Will. Much to the shock of the group Mike decides to take
her home and hide her in the basement of his house. Now I couldn’t even
keep a squirrel hidden in my house without my mom finding out about it
so I'm not sure how they kept an almost autistic girl with superpowers
hidden for days with no one noticing. Well maybe if my squirrel had
super powers it would have been easier.
Think Firestarter meets E.T. with a dose of Carrie.
Stranger Things
is all about movie nostalgia, and if you can get aboard the nostalgia
train you are going to have fun, but if the constant nods and references
to the works of Stephen King, Steven Spielberg, John Carpenter and
others becomes a bit too obtrusive your level of enjoyment may vary. I
enjoyed the "homages" to the greats of the genre, but the show does have
it's minuses as well as it positives. The time spent with the kids
being the most fun, with them teaming up with Eleven (who they name Elle
for short) as they try and locate their missing friend while avoiding
her father and his passel of armed goons. On the other hand the time
spent with the relationship drama between Nancy, Jonathon and Nancy’s
boyfriend Steve (
Joe Keery) I could have done with a little less of, but at least it does go in an interesting direction so that is just a minor peeve.
Think Pretty in Pink meets Pumpkinhead.
For
the most part these characters react and behave like believable people,
I certainly hope I would handle myself as well against such threats as
these kids do, but there were a couple of moments that did lose me as
they strained credulity a bit too far. **
Minor Spoilers** At
one point Nancy and Jonathon are hunting through the woods at night for
the monster that took Will and Barb (right there something I wouldn't do
without heavily armed back-up), then while following a blood trail
across the forest floor Nancy comes across a pulsating fleshy hole in a
tree (something right out of a David Cronenberg movie), and without even
calling out to Jonathon she crawls inside. Who in the hell would do
that? I don’t think even a fully armed Navy Seal would have even
considered such an insane action. The other moment I had a hard time
swallowing was that Chief Hopper attempts to infiltrate the government
facility
twice! Does he have a plan as to how to pull off such a
feat? Nope, and at least the Duffer Brothers treat his stupidity with
the proper result, but I still felt it was a case of a character
behaving in a way simply because “
It’s in the script" and not for any logical reason. Though this does lead to him ending up wandering around
Silent Hill so I'll forgive it.
If you see Pyramid Head, run!
Stranger Things
is a brilliant mix of nostalgia and dark mystery, with a good helping
of horror that got woke the kid in me. I grew up watching
John Carpenter’s Thing and
Poltergeist
where it seemed at any moment horror could strike and ruin your whole
day whether you were in the Antarctic or in suburbia, and the Duff
Brothers captured that feel brilliantly here. This is a show I can
recommend highly and suggest you set aside time to binge watch it.
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