Stranger Things

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When a young boy vanishes, a small town uncovers a mystery involving secret experiments, terrifying supernatural forces and one strange little girl.

Release Date: July 15, 2016

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Classification:

Average Runtime: 1h 5m

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Phase

Classification

Average
Runtime

1h 5m

Network

Production

01
July 15, 2016
When a young boy vanishes, a small town uncovers a mystery involving secret experiments, terrifying supernatural forces, and one strange little girl.
02
October 27, 2017
A year after Will's return, everything seems back to normal… but a darkness lurks just beneath the surface, threatening all of Hawkins.
03
July 4, 2019
Budding romance. A brand-new mall. And rabid rats running toward danger. It's the summer of 1985 in Hawkins ... and one summer can change everything.
04
May 27, 2022
It's been six months since the Battle of Starcourt, which brought terror and destruction to Hawkins. Struggling with the aftermath, our group of friends are separated for the first time - and navigating the complexities of high school hasn't made things any easier. In this most vulnerable time, a new and horrifying supernatural threat surfaces, presenting a gruesome mystery that, if solved, might finally put an end to the horrors of the Upside Down.
05
November 26, 2025
The fall of 1987. Hawkins is scarred by the opening of the Rifts, and our heroes are united by a single goal: find and kill Vecna. But he has vanished — his whereabouts and plans unknown. Complicating their mission, the government has placed the town under military quarantine and intensified its hunt for Eleven, forcing her back into hiding. As the anniversary of Will's disappearance approaches, so does a heavy, familiar dread. The final battle is looming — and with it, a darkness more powerful and more deadly than anything they've faced before. To end this nightmare, they'll need everyone — the full party — standing together, one last time.
July 15, 2016
01. Chapter One: The Vanishing of Will Byers
On his way home from a friend's house, young Will sees something terrifying. Nearby, a sinister secret lurks in the depths of a government lab.
July 15, 2016
02. Chapter Two: The Weirdo on Maple Street
Lucas, Mike and Dustin try to talk to the girl they found in the woods. Hopper questions an anxious Joyce about an unsettling phone call.
July 15, 2016
03. Chapter Three: Holly, Jolly
An increasingly concerned Nancy looks for Barb and finds out what Jonathan's been up to. Joyce is convinced Will is trying to talk to her.
July 15, 2016
04. Chapter Four: The Body
Refusing to believe Will is dead, Joyce tries to connect with her son. The boys give Eleven a makeover. Nancy and Jonathan form an unlikely alliance.
July 15, 2016
05. Chapter Five: The Flea and the Acrobat
Hopper breaks into the lab while Nancy and Jonathan confront the force that took Will. The boys ask Mr. Clarke how to travel to another dimension.
July 15, 2016
06. Chapter Six: The Monster
A frantic Jonathan looks for Nancy in the darkness, but Steve's looking for her, too. Hopper and Joyce uncover the truth about the lab's experiments.
July 15, 2016
07. Chapter Seven: The Bathtub
Eleven struggles to reach Will, while Lucas warns that "the bad men are coming." Nancy and Jonathan show the police what Jonathan caught on camera.
July 15, 2016
08. Chapter Eight: The Upside Down
Dr. Brenner holds Hopper and Joyce for questioning while the boys wait with Eleven in the gym. Back at Will's, Nancy and Jonathan prepare for battle.
October 27, 2017
01. Chapter One: MADMAX
As the town preps for Halloween, a high-scoring rival shakes things up at the arcade, and a skeptical Hopper inspects a field of rotting pumpkins.
October 27, 2017
02. Chapter Two: Trick or Treat, Freak
After Will sees something terrible on trick-or-treat night, Mike wonders whether Eleven's still out there. Nancy wrestles with the truth about Barb.
October 27, 2017
03. Chapter Three: The Pollywog
Dustin adopts a strange new pet, and Eleven grows increasingly impatient. A well-meaning Bob urges Will to stand up to his fears.
October 27, 2017
04. Chapter Four: Will the Wise
An ailing Will opens up to Joyce -- with disturbing results. While Hopper digs for the truth, Eleven unearths a surprising discovery.
October 27, 2017
05. Chapter Five: Dig Dug
Nancy and Jonathan swap conspiracy theories with a new ally as Eleven searches for someone from her past. "Bob the Brain" tackles a difficult problem.
October 27, 2017
06. Chapter Six: The Spy
Will's connection to a shadowy evil grows stronger, but no one's quite sure how to stop it. Elsewhere, Dustin and Steve forge an unlikely bond.
October 27, 2017
07. Chapter Seven: The Lost Sister
Psychic visions draw Eleven to a band of violent outcasts and an angry girl with a shadowy past.
October 27, 2017
08. Chapter Eight: The Mind Flayer
An unlikely hero steps forward when a deadly development puts the Hawkins Lab on lockdown, trapping Will and several others inside.
October 27, 2017
09. Chapter Nine: The Gate
Eleven makes plans to finish what she started while the survivors turn up the heat on the monstrous force that's holding Will hostage.
July 4, 2019
01. Chapter One: Suzie, Do You Copy?
Summer brings new jobs and budding romance. But the mood shifts when Dustin's radio picks up a Russian broadcast, and Will senses something is wrong.
July 4, 2019
02. Chapter Two: The Mall Rats
Nancy and Jonathan follow a lead, Steve and Robin sign on to a secret mission, and Max and Eleven go shopping. A rattled Billy has troubling visions.
July 4, 2019
03. Chapter Three: The Case of the Missing Lifeguard
With El and Max looking for Billy, Will declares a day without girls. Steve and Dustin go on a stakeout, and Joyce and Hopper return to Hawkins Lab.
July 4, 2019
04. Chapter Four: The Sauna Test
A code red brings the gang back together to face a frighteningly familiar evil. Karen urges Nancy to keep digging, and Robin finds a useful map.
July 4, 2019
05. Chapter Five: The Flayed
Strange surprises lurk inside an old farmhouse and deep beneath the Starcourt Mall. Meanwhile, the Mind Flayer is gathering strength.
July 4, 2019
06. Chapter Six: E Pluribus Unum
Dr. Alexei reveals what the Russians have been building, and Eleven sees where Billy has been. Dustin and Erica stage a daring rescue.
July 4, 2019
07. Chapter Seven: The Bite
With time running out -- and an assassin close behind -- Hopper's crew races back to Hawkins, where El and the kids are preparing for war.
July 4, 2019
08. Chapter Eight: The Battle of Starcourt
Terror reigns in the food court when the Mind Flayer comes to collect. But down below, in the dark, the future of the world is at stake.
May 27, 2022
01. Chapter One: The Hellfire Club
El is bullied at school. Joyce opens a mysterious package. A scrappy player shakes up D&D night.
May 27, 2022
02. Chapter Two: Vecna's Curse
A plane brings Mike to California — and a dead body brings Hawkins to a halt. Nancy goes looking for leads. A shaken Eddie tells the gang what he saw.
May 27, 2022
03. Chapter Three: The Monster and the Superhero
Murray and Joyce fly to Alaska, and El faces serious consequences. Robin and Nancy dig up dirt on Hawkins' demons. Dr. Owens delivers sobering news.
May 27, 2022
04. Chapter Four: Dear Billy
Max is in grave danger... and running out of time. A patient at Pennhurst asylum has visitors. Elsewhere, in Russia, Hopper is hard at work.
May 27, 2022
05. Chapter Five: The Nina Project
Owens takes El to Nevada, where she's forced to confront her past, while the Hawkins kids comb a crumbling house for clues. Vecna claims another victim.
May 27, 2022
06. Chapter Six: The Dive
Behind the Iron Curtain, a risky rescue mission gets underway. The California crew seeks help from a hacker. Steve takes one for the team.
May 27, 2022
07. Chapter Seven: The Massacre at Hawkins Lab
As Hopper braces to battle a monster, Dustin dissects Vecna's motives — and decodes a message from beyond. El finds strength in a distant memory.
July 1, 2022
08. Chapter Eight: Papa
Nancy has sobering visions, and El passes an important test. Back in Hawkins, the gang gathers supplies and prepares for battle.
July 1, 2022
09. Chapter Nine: The Piggyback
With selfless hearts and a clash of metal, heroes fight from every corner of the battlefield to save Hawkins — and the world itself.
November 26, 2025
01. Chapter One: The Crawl
November, 1987. The gang evades the military to scour the Upside Down for Vecna — but fails to notice a threat lurking closer to home.
November 26, 2025
02. Chapter Two: The Vanishing of Holly Wheeler
After a vicious attack at the Wheeler home, Mike and Nancy confront the cost of secrecy, while El and Hopper embark on a rescue mission.
November 26, 2025
03. Chapter Three: The Turnbow Trap
Will gains unique insight into Vecna's next move, giving the crew an opportunity to set a trap. Holly explores her new surroundings.
November 26, 2025
04. Chapter Four: Sorcerer
The military tightens its grip on the town. Mike, Lucas and Robin orchestrate a daring escape. El comes face-to-face with the enemy.
December 25, 2025
05. Chapter Five: Shock Jock
The gang hatches an electrifying plan to reconnect Will to the hive mind. Tensions flare during a search of the Upside Down's Hawkins Lab.
December 25, 2025
06. Chapter Six: Escape from Camazotz
As Holly and Max fight to escape Vecna's mind, El must find a way into Will's. Joyce wrestles with guilt. Jonathan and Nancy face a turning point.
December 25, 2025
07. Chapter Seven: The Bridge
On the anniversary of Will's disappearance, the party reunites to prepare for a battle with world-altering implications.
December 31, 2025
08. Chapter Eight: The Rightside Up
As Vecna prepares to destroy the world as we know it, the party must put everything on the line to defeat him once and for all.
Winona Ryder
Joyce Byers
Matthew Modine
Dr. Martin Brenner
David Harbour
Jim Hopper
Millie Bobby Brown
Eleven / Jane
Gaten Matarazzo
Dustin Henderson
Caleb McLaughlin
Lucas Sinclair
Finn Wolfhard
Mike Wheeler
Natalia Dyer
Nancy Wheeler
Noah Schnapp
Will Byers
Charlie Heaton
Jonathan Byers
Dacre Montgomery
Billy Hargrove
Sean Astin
Bob Newby
Sadie Sink
Max Mayfield
Joe Keery
Steve Harrington
Maya Hawke
Robin Buckley
Priah Ferguson
Erica Sinclair
Cara Buono
Karen Wheeler
Brett Gelman
Murray Bauman
Joseph Quinn
Eddie Munson
Nell Fisher
Holly Wheeler
Paul Reiser
Sam Owens
Jake Connelly
Derek Turnbow
Ross Duffer
Creator / Executive Producer
Matt Duffer
Creator / Executive Producer
Shawn Levy
Executive Producer
Karl Gajdusek
Executive Producer
Cindy Holland
Executive Producer
Iain Paterson
Executive Producer
Brian Wright
Executive Producer
Matt Thunell
Executive Producer
Dan Cohen
Executive Producer
Justin Doble
Producer
Rand Geiger
Producer
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Reviewer:
Enes
Date:
February 8, 2026
I have a classic saying: Every good thing comes to an end, and so does this one. Every scene was meticulously crafted from beginning to end; one of the best fantasy series I've ever seen. Every episode gave me goosebumps and brought tears to my eyes. A series can only be this beautiful. Even the opening music is captivating. I wanted Eleven to still be alive, and she is. Everyone moved on with their lives. Of course, I wished their fight with the monster had lasted longer, but this was a very good ending. They didn't leave it unresolved. Five seasons in total. Every good thing comes to an end... We grew along with the characters throughout the season, and everyone eventually went their own way. It was a perfect journey. The acting is perfect, the effects are perfect, and the script is independent and perfect. Even writing this gives me goosebumps. Truly, congratulations on your hard work. In short, friendship, courage, and the fight against the unknown... PERFECT
Rating:
10
Reviewer:
j_otter
Date:
January 26, 2026
**Give the production crew a raise, but please, PLEASE give the characters an action that isn’t just “pacing” whenever they’re stressed or thinking about something…** **LIKE:** Sound editing is chef’s kisssss — every knock, every kettle boiling, every hand slamming on a table. Regular sounds being larger than life really added to the sense of suspense this show needed to keep it spooky and exciting. On the topic of sound, I love the soundtrack — both the use of 80s hits _and_ the synth-heavy underscore, which makes the scary scenes 10x scarier and the sad scenes 10x more heart-wrenching. There were so many beautiful, creative transitions between shots and scenes — you can really tell the camera and post-production crews put a lot of thought and effort into every single episode. The same goes for the special effects, set design, and animation teams — it wouldn’t feel right to post a review without praising their work (obsessed with how the show portrays the Upside Down). I’ve been trying to find something that gets the balance between 'genuinely scary' and 'wholesome' just right ever since watching David Tennant’s run on Doctor Who. Yes… a very random example, which probably wouldn’t feel as scary if I rewatched it now, but it perfectly explains my point. I remember both me and my dad hiding behind cushions during the Weeping Angels episodes, even though the target audience for that show was mainly kids. The scary parts were genuinely scary and exciting, and the wholesome parts, like the relationships you watch develop between characters and the emotional scenes that happen between them, were genuinely wholesome. And that’s exactly how I feel about Stranger Things. **DISLIKE:** Dialogue choices… If one more character says “can you please stop pacing”, “can everybody stop talking at the same time”, or “we need to make a plan”, I’ll go insane (though I suppose I won’t hear that again now the show is finished). These lines were repeated so often. It’s such a shame that the dialogue lets the show down when it’s so gorgeously filmed and edited. Monsters — this might be a controversial opinion, but monsters are 100x less scary when they’re humanised. Obsessed with the demogorgons, obsessed with the demodogs. The giant spider thing was meh, but I didn’t find Vecna scary at all. I was however interested in learning about his backstory, but I didn’t feel the same level of suspense watching him as I did when the demogorgons and demodogs were lurking in the dark, ready to pounce, and you didn’t quite know where they came from or how they would evolve. A human monster just feels too familiar, whereas creatures that are unfamiliar and from an alien source instil a fear of the unknown and the unpredictable — making them way more terrifying. Because of this, I love seasons 1 and 2, but I just don’t like the later seasons as much. They’re less scary, the poor dialogue choices become more tiring, and all of the beautiful sound design and cinematography choices I praised earlier in my review become 'expected' rather than 'unique'. If the show had finished at either season 1 or 2, I probably would’ve given it a 100% / 5-star review. **CONCLUSION:** This will always be one of my favourite TV shows of all time. I’m not a big fan of the dialogue choices or where the story went in the later seasons, but I’ll never stop praising the gorgeous cinematography and sound design, and the way the show perfectly blended genuinely terrifying scenes with the more emotional, coming-of-age side of the story. I feel kind of emotional that it’s ended :’(
Rating:
8.0
Reviewer:
Mauser69
Date:
January 22, 2026
Actuallly a rather poor series. It has a lot of very original thought and some great special efffects, but the stupidity of so much of it is just too hard to swallow - one simple example: at one point when the players are down in an undergorund lab with what they say are totally impenetrabal pollycarbinate windows that the creatures cannot possibly break through, well, they do break them, but a few scenes later, these same creatures cannot get through simple glass doors on the front of the building! I would not recommend this show to anyone over 12.
Rating:
4.0
Reviewer:
Sampson
Date:
January 1, 2026
**Could have been a Geek's Favorite Movie** I really wanted to like Stranger Things more. As a fan of DND, I had high hopes for what this show would be able to offer. While the plots were well written, I found the pacing to be erratic which made it hard to stay interested. Often times, I found myself confused by th jovial interactions in the midst of deeply traumatic scenes. While these moments offered opportunities for character building, I also found they took away from the serious plots. Ultimately, I enjoyed seeing these kids save the world time and time again, I don't feel this show left a lasting impression on me. While interesting while watching, I don't imagine I would find myself coming back to this show as I think the mystery and intruige were ultimately weighed down by pacing. While there was a substantial amount of content to cover that might be tough to fit into a film, I think having the limitations of a trilogy of films would've helped focus the story into a more evenly paced final product.
Rating:
7.0
Reviewer:
James
Date:
October 14, 2023
Intelligent and witty with a perfect seasoning of 80’s references.
Rating:
7.0
Reviewer:
GenerationofSwine
Date:
April 14, 2023
I don't remember Africa being that popular in the 80s... do you? I mean, those of you who are old enough to actually remember the 80s. It was a hit, I remember that. I remember my mom liked it... my MOTHER liked it, which is sort of the population that Toto catered to, but I don't remember Africa having that much play on any station that anyone openly listened to until... what 2014 when Family Guy popularized it again because one of their writers played too much GTA in the early naughts. Anyway, this show comes with a really important lesson. It was great, it really was, the first seasons were pretty fantastic, and then it stank. It went woke, the character did things they wouldn't do, things that were completely out of character, all the men became incompetent morons, and then.... ... and then it dropped the woke crap because it's fan base started to walk away and... the fan base came back, and the rest of the season was great again... well it was good again, it was better than just about everything else again. I just sort of wish the 80s nostalgia was more 80s nostalgia and note more what Millennials think is 80s
Rating:
10
Reviewer:
MovieGuys
Date:
August 12, 2022
I came to the latest season of Stranger Things with real reservations. I felt the last season was simply a recycling of what had gone before and wondered, if this wasn't another case of, "rinse and repeat." Well, thankfully, that's not the case. The latest season adds new material and fleshes out the overall back story. Its suitably creepy too, with yet more 80's style nostalgia and one of my favourite Kate Bush songs. Everything is well placed, great sets, great acting and thrills that keep you coming back. Its sets things up beautifully for the next season too. NOTE: The last season was truly anti climatic and rather simplistic. Its a shame, given how well, this started out.
Rating:
7.0
Reviewer:
Manuel São Bento
Date:
March 29, 2020
**Season 3 - SPOILER-FREE Review** If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog @ Stranger Things first appeared in our lives back in 2016 with its phenomenal first season, followed by a less amazing yet still entertaining Season 2. I was pretty excited for the third adventure with one of the best (if not the best) young ensemble casts ever. The acting in this show is unbelievable, even more when considering the age of most of the kids (14-17). Millie Bobby Brown is 15-years-old! Fifteen! Weirdly, the show will only be eligible for next year's Emmy's, but if she doesn't get nominated AND win, I sincerely don't know what she needs to do more. The seamless ease that Millie has in showing emotion and delivering those subtle expressions that only the best actors can achieve after years of experience ... She's going to break the Oscar record for youngest Best Actress / Best Supporting Actress winner. It's meant to happen. I started with her because last season I handed the highlight crown to Noah Schnapp (Will Byers) who also gives an excellent performance, even if his character has less to do this time around (similar to the debut season). Of all the young actors, Millie is so much ahead of her fellow colleagues that she indirectly diminishes Sadie Sink's (Max) performance. They have completely different emotional responses to similarly painful events. Not that Sadie isn't able to transmit her feelings (I enjoyed both her and her character a lot more this season), but jumping from Eleven showing 200% of her emotion to any other character is always going to feel that the other actor/actress isn't at her level (truthfully though, they aren't). In addition to Millie, the other standout has to be David Harbour as Jim Hopper. This might be the funniest season so far, as well as the most emotionally powerful. Both are due to Hopper's arc and Harbour's award-worthy performance. He's hilarious, happy, sad, angry, drunk, frustrated, proud, ... His arc is definitely the one that serves as a pillar to this season's structure. Without him, this season wouldn't be near to the quality it is. Harbour's chemistry with Winona Ryder (Joyce Byers) is palpable, and that's basically enough for me to have a great time. However, The Duffer Brothers really deserve a lot of credit. The writing is some of the best I've seen in the last few years. Everyone hated Steve Harrington (Joe Keery) in the first season, but his development got such a fantastic treatment that now everyone loves him. The same happens with Billy Hargrove (Dacre Montgomery). I genuinely hated him last season due to how cliche and lazily written he was. Now, even though his backstory isn't anything innovative, he's undoubtedly seen as a more compelling character, which proves that Stranger Things really doesn't have a single bad character (main or supporting, at least). Max also gets a better script, plus her on-screen time with Eleven helped the character become more interesting. Nevertheless, how's the main gang?! Well, Gaten Matarazzo (Dustin Henderson) spends less time with his original friends, but his side adventure with Steve, Erica Sinclair (Priah Ferguson), and Robin Buckley (Maya Hawke), the newest addition to the show which is also the best surprise of the season, is also pretty entertaining even if it's connected to one of my issues (more on that soon). Mike Wheeler (Finn Wolfhard), Lucas Sinclair (Caleb McLaughlin), Will, Eleven, and Max have a whole romantic subplot that I surprisingly enjoyed mostly due to how realistic and heartfelt The Duffer Brothers wrote it. Obviously, comedy is always a must inside this group, and I wasn't disappointed, having dropped more than just a few laughs throughout the episodes. Finally, Charlie Heaton (Jonathan Byers) and Natalia Dyer (Nancy Wheeler) also have their own inspiring journey, the one that addresses the most how people had to live in the 80s. Dealing with discrimination, workplace injustices, and different lifestyles are put in perspective always through unforced dialogue and/or events. I really loved this season structure. How each group of characters has their own side adventure so that in the end, they can all team-up together to defeat the evil within Hawkins. I never felt bored or less engaged in a story. Season 2 had that horrible episode with Kali (Linnea Berthelson), and some episodes seemed to drag. Season 3 not only has the perfect runtime for each episode, but the story that they cover during each chapter is always remarkably captivating. Of course, I always felt more entertained when Eleven and Hopper were on-screen, so their subplots obviously became my favorites. However, they don't take anything away from the remaining stories or characters. Evidence number one would be the best ending of the show. It's hard to hold off the tears during those last few moments, especially if you went through the same event (which 99% of people definitely did unless you had literally zero friends growing up). Technically, the show proves that you don't need a big budget to provide visual delight. From the appropriated costume design to the addictive 80s' style soundtrack, everything is on-point with tons of practical effects being employed. The CGI regarding the monsters and everything that comes with them are convincing enough, and the action sequences are mostly shot well. The editing gets a little sloppy near the final episodes, but nothing too serious. My main and only issue with this season has to be the actual main plot. The thread that connects all of the subplots and groups of characters that I've been praising so much. Besides being very similar to the last season (monster comes, possesses people, and you know the rest), it's worse regarding the "how" and "why" the monsters came back. There's a whole story involving Russians, secret bases and codes, that feel too cheesy and over-the-top, reaching a level of absurdity that even affected some action scenes "a la Fast and Furious". It's unusual for the main plot to be as cliche and uninteresting as it is, while the side stories are astonishingly good. All in all, Stranger Things delivers yet another fantastic season. Its debut continues to hold the #1 spot, but Season 3 is so much better than its predecessor. Once again, the characters are what make this show a massive success. Even separating everyone into different groups, the cast's phenomenal chemistry remains intact. Millie Bobby Brown takes her crown back from Season 2's highlight, Noah Schnapp, and guarantees herself tons of nominations and hopefully a few awards, due to a perfect display of her emotional range. David Harbour is right behind her, and then comes the rest of the ensemble cast, one of the best to ever grace a TV screen. The Duffer Brothers are masterful screenwriters, presenting extremely developed character scripts, as well as funny, exciting and entertaining side stories. Despite a less strong main plot, Stranger Things finishes this season with the best ending of the entire series. If you're not crying during the last 10 minutes … I don't know. Can't wait for Season 4, even if I would be more than satisfied to see it end its run now. Rating: A-
Rating:
8.0
Reviewer:
Dean
Date:
September 2, 2019
**AVERAGE AT BEST** This show is average at best. I wouldn't recommend it to adults. It's more suited for kids and teenagers. For me as an adult this show was boring and not serious at all. Propaganda is not very blatant here and kinda hidden, but it's still there and especially visible in 5th season. Attentive eye will catch it.
Rating:
4.0