Until recently, Stranger
Things was for me a bit like Game of
Thrones; everybody seemed to have seen it except me. A lot of my fellow
conspiratorialists kept asking me if I'd watched it and were strongly recommending
it to me. My first real introduction to the series, beyond second-hand
descriptions, was when I visited the fan shop in Las Vegas USA, see: https://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.com/2023/11/meadows.html.
I saw shelves of merchandise that consisted mostly of designer 1980's
televisions, radios and other household appliances, together with models of a frightening
monster with a head shaped like a flower. My curiosity got the better of me and
I eventually ended up watching it. At the current time I have watched the first
season and a few episodes of the second. It didn't take me long to understand
why Stranger Things is so popular in
the Woo-o-sphere. I was also not surprised to learn that when it was in
pre-production, its working title was "Montauk". Anybody familiar
with that strange period of history at the tip of Long Island
USA will recognize
the scenario. It has an ensemble cast, but in the first season the central
figures are four young boys, aged in their early teens. Despite this fact, the
series is definitely aimed at adults and probably some of its horror elements
are not suitable for younger viewers. It also addresses subjects like the
occult, non-consensual human experimentation, child abuse and mind control by
the state, embodied by Eleven. Some of the actors are probably a bit too old
for their characters, such as Barb. The setting is a small town surrounded by
forest and nearby is a government laboratory; in this sense it is very like Dark, see: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2023/12/dark.html;
and there are many other plot parallels between the two series. It is also like
Dark stylistically; for example there
are the same interlude scenes with music and vignettes. The laboratory is a
sinister and furtive place with a tense and slightly fearful relationship to
the local civilians that reminds me of Alice
Spring , Australia
and its nearby compound, Pine Gap. There is good reason for this because it
turns out that the laboratory has experiments running into supernatural and
psychic powers. It ends up opening a portal into a different dimension that
they call "the Upside Down". When this portal is opened, all kinds of
strange things happen. This element reminds me of Stephen King's The Mist, see: https://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2008/11/mist.html.
There are incursions by the denizens of the Upside Down into our world and vice
versa. At one point, one of the young boys makes a pet out of a creature from
that realm. Another of the boys, Will, is psychologically transformed by his
visit to the Upside Down and is compared to Phineas Gage, a railway
construction worker who suffered a traumatic brain injury in 1848. Gage's
friends and family said that although he didn't lose any mental abilities his
personality became very different afterwards. Stranger Things is very multi-faceted and on top of all its other
elements it is also a nostalgia movie. There are many throwbacks to typical
1980's culture. Simple but fun computer games, Dungeons and Dragons, off-road
bicycles; and, in one episode, the four boys dress up as the Ghostbusters for
Halloween. From what I've watched so far, Stranger
Things is very good and well worth watching. As with Dark, it's best to binge-watch it rather than leaving it and coming
back. That way you won't lose track of the complex storyline and multitude of
characters. Manifest went downhill in
the second season, see: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2024/05/manifest.html;
I hope Stranger Things doesn't.
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