09-20-2016, 11:36 AM
Stranger Things
Drama, Horror, Mystery
![[Image: maxresdefault.jpg]](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/yg29RvYNSDQ/maxresdefault.jpg)
![[Image: maxresdefault.jpg]](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/yg29RvYNSDQ/maxresdefault.jpg)
What is it about?
When a young boy disappears, his mother, a police chief, and his friends must confront terrifying forces in order to get him back.
Why do you recommend it?
When Netflix showed me the trailer for this series, I immediately knew I was going to like it. I absolutely adored the movie Super 8, and this felt like a nod to that with a few variations.
Stranger Things did not disappoint. From the very beginning, we were sucked into it with a tense opening scene that set the stage for what sort of series this was going to be. We're introduced to the characters one by one, in a way that makes us understand that each of them is going to eventually play a role in the outworking of the plot. I initially thought that Hopper was going to be a character that I disliked, but that wasn't the case. He was human and flawed, and I loved how his backstory was revealed little by little, up until the last episode, when we saw the culmination of what made him into the man that he was. I thought Winona Ryder did brilliantly as a strained, anxious, just-a-little-shy-of-emotionally-unstable mother of a lost child. And all of the kids were phenomenal in their roles, but I especially appreciated Millie Bobby Brown's performance as El/Eleven. She didn't have much dialogue, and most of her acting was done with her body language, her eyes, and her facial expressions, and it was absolutely brilliant.