Show review and critique: Stranger Things
Stranger Things dropped in 2016. It is a blend of supernatural horror, kid adventure and 80s culture. It has 4 seasons with one coming up. It is fun but the longer it goes, the more you wonder if it really needed to be that long.
A kid goes missing in a quiet town after playing Dungeons and Dragons with his friends. The search leads to a weird lab, a girl with telekinetic powers, and a whole other world beneath. Each season adds new people, places and threats but always end up in the same group protecting each other.
One of the things that makes it stand out is the 80s vibe; the clothes, music and other props all makes it worth watching. It is also scary, where monsters start as unseen forces but escalates into bigger ones.
The themes explored:
Friendship and loyalty
Trauma and loss of innocence
Government secrecy
Unethical science
As the seasons progress, the show starts feeling repetitive. It sacrifices emotional depth for bigger stakes. Some arcs and characters in the later seasons feel designed to stretch the story, rather than deepening it. It shifts from psychological and mysterious horror to loud and heavy actions losing its original tension.
The early seasons were tight, emotional, and unique. Over time it's original aesthetic slightly wears off. While it was enjoyable I felt like it was extended because it already had a large audience.
Did the show really need that many seasons?
Probably not. It could have been easily wrapped up in three or four seasons. The fifth season will probably feel like it's coming to tie up loose ends and please fab than to serve the original story. It is still worth watching if you love the characters, but it is a reminder of how popularity can turn great concepts thin.