Stranger Things
A
Review
Is this Nostalgia
Porn?
Is this the kind of show
and movie that we get from time to time, so steeped in a love for days gone by
that it loses its way and instead of becoming something wholly its own, it
instead is just an assemblage of pieces, of body parts, much like
Frankenstein’s Monster, but one that does not live and breathe. Does the electricity actually bring it to
life, or does it sit and smolder, a dead thing?
The story of Stranger
Things can be broken down into one simple sentence: It is the story of a boy lost and a girl
found, and everything that results in the world around them is a repercussion
of these two events.
To give too much story
would be to give too much away. This is
best experienced fresh, without much exposition. The trailer for the show sets that tone, and
it’s for the better if the viewer doesn’t come to the table knowing any more.
A group of friends, pre-teen
boys who are the ultimate nerds, who play Dungeons and Dragons and are
interested in science, finish one of their games and split for the night. Three ride off on their bikes, heading back
to their suburban homes. Already we have
a quaint moment of nostalgia: America in
the early 1980’s. Only, one of the boys
disappears, and from this event the rest of the story unspools. His friends search for him, of course, out on
their own, like any intrepid kid would in a movie set in the 80’s. But instead of finding their friend, they
find a girl, all alone, with an almost bald head, looking disheveled and
lost. And from there, things
get...stranger.
The story involves a creature,
psychic powers, a vast government conspiracy, and an alternate dimension. It references and uses these plot devices
just like any feature from the 80’s would, and here is where there might be
danger of this story turning into Nostalgia Porn, of the electricity that
shoots through the Monster not reviving it, but instead setting it on fire,
reminding us that dead things stay dead, and they cannot take on a life of their
own.
Not so here. No.
The electricity shocks the heart to life, and what a beautiful,
bleeding, messy heart it is. Sure,
there’s lots of sentimentality. This
movie is equal parts The Goonies and The Monster Squad, but it’s also got
dashes of Freaks and Geeks, with a nice seasoning of Nightmare on Elm Street
thrown in, as well. And while all of
these body parts are familiar, and we see them and say, “Yes, that arm belongs
to Freddy,” and “Those eyes belong to the Goonies,” it’s the heart that’s beating
in the chest that separates this show from simple Nostalgia Porn and allows the
Monster to stumble to its feet and shamble around, a wholly new creation in and
of itself, even if the parts belong from somewhere else.
This show is a great trip
down memory lane, yes, and the creators knew exactly what they were doing (The
synth score? Brilliant. That scene where the faceless government
agents pile out of their cars to hunt down their intended prey, and the synth
theme that accompanies their arrival, that echoes a similar moment in Halloween III? Awesome.
Another scene, involving the creature, when it gets hurt and utters a
cry that sounds strangely just like the anguished howls the creature made in
The Thing? Genius. The whole show is riddled with moments like
these). But the show does not rely on
these fond memories, or those sharp nods to geeks who get it, it relies on
something all great stories do. It
relies on its heart.
It is this strong,
thumping heart, centered on characters you care for, characters that have arcs
(even down to the bit players in the background), that gives Stranger Things its
own life, that makes it worth viewing and enjoying.
And oh, how much fun it
is!
Dig in and relish every
frame, every joke, every heartbreaking moment.
You’ll be glad you did.
Well-said. This might actually push me over the top into Netflix terrritory.
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