Stranger Things an Homage to Kid-Centric Sci-Fi of the '80s
Netflix series tosses children into suspenseful thriller.


Stranger Things. Available Friday, July 15, on Netflix.
Nostalgia has a deservedly bad name. I'm still waiting for a director's cut of Grease in which we relive the good old days of Quemoy and Matsu,
Little Rock school integration, the thrilling early moments of space travel or creamed chipped beef.
So don't call Netflix's spooky, Spielbergian Stranger Things an avatar of '80s nostalgia. Rather, it's a loving homage to the moment early in that decade when newly empowered Baby Boomer directors turned the supernatural and sci-fi from a genre into the mainstream with a series of films in which kids battled forces—space aliens, vengeful ghosts, runaway technology, malevolent government agencies—beyond the dim comprehension of their clueless parents and teachers.
The Goonies, War Games, Stand by Me and Firestarter are all touchstones for Stranger Things. And any doubt about the identity of the show's intellectual godfather is resolved when one character, trying to explain what they're up against, asks a cop, "You read any Stephen King?"
An occasional wink like that one aside, Stranger Things is not a campy send-up but a hugely engrossing and enjoyably paranoid suspense thriller. It opens with a cataclysmic security failure at a secretive government lab in a small Indiana town. And whatever has gone missing, the lab's scientists are wearing hazmat suits and carrying automatic weapons while hunting for it.
The lab meltdown is followed, in short order, by the disappearance of a nerdish kid named Will (Noah Schnapp) from the local junior high. Though a search for him is organized, its prospects seem discouraging: The police chief (David Harbour, State Of Affairs) has never investigated anything bigger than serial garden-gnome theft, and his idea of a nutritious breakfast is Schlitz and toothpaste.
So Will's three friends—the sort of dorky pre-teen outcasts who stay in touch by walkie-talkie and shield themselves from social persecution in marathon Dungeons and Dragons sessions–decide to do their own legwork.
They don't have much success, but mucking around in the woods just outside town, they do encounter an odd little girl (Millie Bobby Brown, Intruders) sporting an unfeminine buzzcut, whose vocabulary doesn't extend much beyond "yes," "no," and "11," the number perhaps uncoincidentally tattooed on her arm above a bar code. The bar code, they soon discover, is far from her most exotic characteristic. As one of the boys says in a halting voice somewhere between awe and fear: "She … does stuff."
You don't need to be a cinematic Nostradamus to predict where things go from there, at least in broad outline. But whatever degree of predictability Stranger Things suffers from is more than made up by the wit of twin-brother producers Matt and Ross Duffer, lately of Fox's dystopian Wayward Pines, who did most of the writing.
Even the inevitable preposterous scene in which the school science teacher instructs the kids on how to tear a hole in the space-time continuum is neatly wrapped with a hilariously pompous warning: "Science is neat, but I'm afraid it's not very forgiving."
The show also gets a boost from the capable performances of its cast. Lead billing goes to Winona Ryder, slowly rebuilding a career that went into hibernation for a decade. No longer playing ingenues, she's inhabited a series of brittle middle-aged roles and does so again here as a frazzled single mom pushed the broken edge of sanity by her son's disappearance.
But good as she is, she's outshone by the cast's kids. None of the boys—they include Finn Wolfhard, Gaten Matarazzo, and Caleb McLaughlin—has a long resume. (They're all so young that in some cases their voices changed between shooting and post-production, and other actors had to be brought in when re-recording snips of unclear dialogue was necessary.)
But they all expand their sharply written roles into fully rounded characters: bright but not geniuses, loyal friends but sometimes jealous and spiteful, and reflexively malicious to anybody outside their hermetically sealed circle.
Says one, his face a mask of mock innocence though he knows his sister's breakfast-table bragging about hard study is actually a front for a make-out session with a new boyfriend: "What was your test on again? Human anatomy?" And when one of the boys agrees to hide the fugitive Eleven in his family's basement overnight, the rest are horrorstruck: "What if he slept naked?"
But the real star is Brown, who brings the enigmatic and ill-used Eleven to heart-wrenching life almost without benefit of dialogue. Her face flickers with wonder, woe and menace, often in the same scene, in a way that even cynics who make a point of rooting for horror-movie monsters will not be able to resist. Stephen King supposedly wrote the book Firestarter just for Drew Barrymore to star in after he saw her in E.T. If he's watching Stranger Things, I wouldn't be surprised if his next novel is built around an 11-year-old girl with a buzzcut.
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The show looks promising, but I must point out:
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"Fox's dystopian Wayward Pines"
That's not a good sign. I found that show rather grimderp, and everyone in the city seemed to obfuscate everything needlessly, even though they all pretty much knew what was going on and it was never really explained why everyone bothered hiding everything and denying that anything abnormal was going on when they all pretty much knew that weird shit was going on.
Sort of like Scully after season 2. You've held a frozen alien fetus in your hands, Scully. There's being and skeptic and there's being just a dumbass.
Seems like homage is just a highfalutin way of saying nostalgia here.
No homage, bro
Let's drop the prejudices and embrace the show to indicate our support for the right of homages to marry.
Hour two of the test deployment from Hell. "Brett, can you pinch hit for our coworker who is adapting some code you wrote two years ago?"
Brett: "Sure"
Its never, "sure". I know better.
Wait... so you're a soldier or a baseball player or a coder?
He's unemployed.
Three weeks. I was unemployed for three weeks. Jesus. In my adult life, I've been unemployed for maybe six weeks. I didn't even file for unemployment because I'm a libertarian and fuck going to the government with my hat in my hand before my savings ran out.
Professional metaphor blender.
8 minutes ago: "Hold on, let me see if I can find the one guy in this whole organization who can deploy your updated code to test."
Heh, I get it. The kid's holding a walkie-talkie.
"Brett, can you pinch hit for our coworker who is adapting some code you wrote two years ago?"
Code you wrote "on the fly" I hope.
That's stealing a base.
Situation developing in Turkey.
BBC: Bridges crossing the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Turkey blocked, with reports of jets flying low in Ankara
Reuters: Turkish prime minister says military action being taken without chain of command
Telegraph concurs:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/new.....n-ankara1/
If you remove the top link, isn't it still a chain?
It's strange how none of the major news outlets are covering this. Based on twitter the prime minister has already gone on TV, there's clearly a coup attempt underway, etc, but the media is not reporting it...
It's not clear if the attempt is past tense or present tense. There is apparently video of a soldier on a bridge in Istanbul saying the military took over, go home, this is not a drill, this is not a joke. So it's not like a couple dudes took over the radio station Africa-style.
If Tarran is around maybe he can tell us what is happening in this video.
Video supposedly of solider saying they have taken over
Turkey Reddit thread. Looks like coup.
Oh fuck. The military or the government? A strike at Erdogan?
CNN TV now reporting it.
It only took them, what, half an hour? Amateurs.
I just flipped the TV at the office to CNN and they're still going on about how two of the people killed in Nice were from Texas, nothing about Turkey yet.
They broke in to their France coverage for Turkey and then broke away again. Weird. It's not like having no information has ever stopped cable news before.
It looks like CNN actually maintains an Istanbul bureau...it's confounding when you contrast what's going on on twitter right now vs what is being reported in the media. Especially since major media outlets have seemed to acknowledge there is a major story.
Social media might be down in Turkey now.
Sounds like it's Constitutionally enforced military coup/dissolving the government time.
Tanks at the airport.
Looks like Erdogan should have passed some anti-coup legislation when he had a chance.
No mention of The Last Starfighter?
For shame.
Go on...
A bunch of Skenazy's free range kids on the loose...
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I'm six episodes into Stranger Things, and so far it's easily the best thing Netflix has ever made. It has a strong goonies/ET feel though it's darker than either. And the synth score is one of the best parts of the show.
This is true, very entertaining show