Itâs no secret when one looks at the trailer for Netflixâs latest original series Stranger Things, which premieres this Friday, that itâs heavily influenced by pop culture in the 1980s. Steven Spielberg and Stephen King are ever present, however, the show manages to walk that fine line between nostalgic homage and complete originality.
In our interview with the young cast and the Duffer Brothers who created the series, we learned that there was some required viewing before production began: Stand By Me, The Goonies, E.T., and Poltergeist, to name a few titles. But as the Duffers explained, there was more to this than just a couple of tips of the hat to the entertainment of our childhoods.
A different kind of material could get made back then, where characters who happened to be kids were treated with respect, and when there was something more substantial going on beneath the surface of horror, science fiction, and fantasy.
“I think part of the reason we want to do this is that weâre genre fans, but itâs becoming harder and harder to make the kind of movies that we love where theyâre actually characters and itâs doing interesting things and itâs not just about jump scares,” Ross Duffer tells me on the set during the final week of shooting in Atlanta. “And if you look at Stephen King and early Steven Spielberg, these are movies that are about more than just making the audience jump every once and a while. Theyâre about character… What we want to see, we canât get it done in film. And then we started seeing what people were doing in television, we saw an opening there. Weâre like, thatâs the way that we can tell a story that we want to tell.”
Matt Duffer added, “I think even when we were young, even when we were 12, stuff like Stand By Me resonated with us because it never felt like it was talking down to us. It felt like these were actual kids behaving in these extreme circumstances behaving like kids really doâeven if that involves language, or these kids are actually in danger. So that was really important to us.”
Ross added that even as adults, movies like Stand by Me continue to resonate with him. “We were all kids at some point so I find stories about kids and growing up, coming of age and dealing with very real, scary situations, is something I think everyone can identify with,” he said. “And I donât think just because it stars kids it has to be solely for kids and I think if a kid does watch this show, I like that it feels more edgy and dangerous for them watching. The IT miniseries, we saw that really young. Itâs not good now but at the time, it had a major impact on me. It scared the living shit out of me.”
One thing that Stranger Things does, and it does very well, is give the kids who lead the show real characters to play. They feel like real kids, like sweet kids, who care about each other and who have to stand up for what is right. They react authentically and they have feelings whether that comes to their parents falling apart, the loss of their best friend, being picked on at school, or a new person who comes into their lives. For the Duffers, authenticity was key to making a show like this work.
“I guess the one thing that we were always careful of was make sure that the kids are reacting in very real ways to these situations,” Matt told us. “Because thereâs a tendency of people when they write kids or even direct them to be cutesy and fun about it and itâs like… No, but itâs dangerous and itâs scary.”
Ross added, “Goonies and Stand By Me, they take everything very seriously. They have fun on their adventures but they take it very seriously so we wanted the stakes to feel really high.”
One thing adding to the stakes: the monster. While coming-of-age genre definitely is at the core of this series, horror is always lurking around the corner, and the Duffers are admirers of horror, sci-fi, and fantasy from all different forms of media. “Thereâs [John] Carpenter, thereâs Silent Hill, thereâs Clive Barker, thereâs some anime references. Weâre sort of pulling from everything. Weâre not even consciously referencing this stuff but weâre pulling from it,” says Matt Duffer.
There’s also a hint of H.P. Lovecraft, which is obvious when one looks around the sets that are dressed for episodes that come later in the series. “I think the Lovecraftian thing that youâre seeing is that, when itâs horror, I think itâs always scariest when itâs not quite explainable and itâs a little weird and it doesnât quite make sense so weâre certainly pulling from those references,” Ross said.
In todayâs bing-viewing culture, thereâs no question that audiences will devour the eight-episode series, which the brothers describe as ânovelistic,” in only a few sittings. Can fans look forward to more Stranger Things or will the story of Mike, Will, Eleven, and the rest of the town be done for good when we finish the last chapter?
“We tied a bow but itâs not perfect… Thereâs unanswered questions but just enough that itâll satisfied people and leave the door open.” Having seen the series, I can only hope.
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Stranger Things, starring Winona Ryder, David Harbour, Finn Wolfhard, Millie Bobby Brown, Gaten Matarazzo, Caleb McLaughlin, Noah Schnapp, and Matthew Modine, premieres on Netflix Friday, July 15.
Images: Netflix