It's taken me about a month to write this, mostly because it took that long for negative reactions to Stranger Things content to finally flush out of my algorithm on Twitter or Instagram. Man, was it a constant stream those first two weeks of the year when every other post that got fed to me was around it. But it's time to put some thoughts in writing.
Let's start by saying I've generally been super pro-Stranger Things. Granted, many of us were that first year, long back in 2016 when it came out on NETFLIX with no real promotion. It was aimed as nostalgia-porn for a generation taht I;m barely a part of - given it much touches on the 80s and I was born in 1991. But still, it was fresh, it was layered, it was dark where it needed to be, mysterious where it needed to be, and funny, touching, loving where it needed to be. Season 1 was a masterpiece.
Season 2 wasn't as good, but had a ton of great moments and episodes, and also came quickly, airing in 2017. Then came the relative troubles, needing two years until Season 3 in 2019, and that season being just a touch off - with teh addition of more characters there were more disconnected plots, more bloat, a touch too much zaniness, color and light (despite a fairly good scary central premise). The dials were a bit off.
And then was Season 4. A lot of people started fully jumping off at that point, be it the movie-length episode run times, the even more disconnected plot (Hopper and Joyce in Russia!?) or the now getting comical age gap between the actors portraying the main kids and the characters they were portraying. You know what, though - despite these very fair critiques, I still loved it. I named Stranger Things Season 4 my favorite TV show of 2022. I don't regret that at all. To me, Season 4 was a true masterpiece, even more than the initial Season 1.
It added a layer of mythology that worked so perfectly in teh slow reveal of Vecna being Henry Creel, and more so, being "One" to El's "Eleven". It was a perfect mystery unwrapped bit by bit in great detail. The final episode with the merging of Eleven vs. Vecna, the Robyn/Steve/Nancy crew in the upside down with a bunch of guns shooting at Vecna, and "Running Up That Hill" playing was all so perfect. Again, I was more in on Stranger Things than most. I was the mark, the person ready to give them the benefit of the doubt.
That all said - Season 5 was a huge disappointment, particularly the last three episodes, and more particularly the finale. That was a letdown. So many issues, so many shortcuts, so many weird decisions, so many departures from what made earlier seasons great. So much to unpack here.
**two quick asides:
1.) Despite me not liking it, people saying this was a "Game of Thrones Finale" level disaster is way overstating things. Nothing will come close to Game of Thrones throwing away more goodwill than maybe any show in 20 years in one fell, stupid swoop.
2.) Nearly none of my criticisms will touch on the first four episodes that came out near Thanksgiving, which to me were generally quite good and with the final bit being Will realizing his powers was in theory setting things up really nicely.**
So where to begin. For starters, they crammed way too much into that final episodes. There were a lot of int he end correct spoilers that the final set of episodes would cover a lot of the backstory from the play that delvers into Henry Creel's background - that he was infected by particles representing the Mind Flayer in that cave way back when. That it would all be revealed that it was the Mind Flayer as the true big bad from teh beginning, and that Vecna was the unwitting vessel. That all ended up being mostly true - but was way too much to go through in that last episode. This should've been teased out bit by bit across the season, or at the very least across the last three episodes. Instead, it was all jammed up at the very end.
Then was the final battle, where after turning the Mind Flayer into the real big bad (granted, I credit them for not making it a total redemption arc for Henry) the final battle wasn't against the Mind Flayer all that much - it all seemed too easy and "power of friendship", a lesser battle against an active Mind Flayer than the battle against a semi-comatose / hive-minding Henry in Season 4. It was also again rushed.
Then there was the weird character stuff, making Holly Wheeler, a completely faceless character for four seasons, into a key character in teh last season, to sidelining important ones for so long. For making so much of it around Nancy's and Jonathan's relationship, something that truthfully was never all that interesting (and neutered what is generally the most dependably cool character in Nancy). The plot thinned so mcuh, from everyone kind of getting over a demogorgan I guess killing Mr. Wheeler and putting Mrs. Wheeler into a coma. Just a bunch of over-focus on plot and fake moments rather than earned ones in past.
Don't get me started on that never-ending coda, that series of endings that would make the finales of The Return of the King blush. So much of that was saccharine nonsense for a show that generally did well with emotional moments in past. The worst was probably that scene on the roof, pitting four characters in a reminisce when those four never really shared the same worldview or friendship in the past (certainly not ALL of those four). That plus the umpteen speeches, adn the general positive outlook of the coda was just jarring given again all the terror that group, that town has gone through.
Ultimately, I think what really has sharpened into focus when I think about Stranger Things is how the target audience seemed to change for the show over the years. It might be the people that watch more NETFLIX now are teh ones taht are the kids actors age, from the youngsters in 2016 to adults now. The show focsued far more on not just the kids as cahracters, but kid themes, kid emotions, gen Z stuff. That's not where Stranger Things started - despite the kids being truly kids in 2016, and them being instrumental characters, the show was targeted at adults who could remember stuff in the 1980s and 1990s and the like. The show was aimed at adults who were probably ~25-35 in 2016, but the target age didn't change as the show grew.
In the end, Stranger Things was a great show at its best, and even in this past season there were some great moments, but it didn't know how the stick the landing. Maybe that's because it never should've gotten this big and the story sprawled far more than The Duffer Brothers ever expected it to. But then again they had three years to plan for Season 4 (which was great), and they had three full years for Season 5 and messed it all up. It's sad really. It isn't a Game of Thrones level failure, but more in like with a HIMYM level one, where you think adn look back on how easily this all should've been fixed differently. In the end, though, I'll never forget the joys of the show at its best, even if I'll forget the mess of its end.