The Duffer Brothers’ smash hit Netflix series Stranger Things took audiences by storm and introduced them to a new (and old, very old) form of visual storytelling. We were immediately sucked into the world where, on the surface, life was everything we know it to be – kids riding bikes, boys chasing girls, and parents trying to reel it all in and keep up. But around each corner was some kind of clouded mystery that — beautifully delivered with visual hat tips to ’80s filmmakers — is meant to be explored by our Magellan-style main (children) characters simply in search of discovering something new.
With this supernatural setup, we get a fully developed piece of storytelling that transcends normal narratives and character arcs, but puts a hard stamp on modern day pop culture by making us want to relive some of these moments we had as children.
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Cinematic Homage
Immediately upon watching Stranger Things, we think of E.T., Close Encounters of the Third Kind, The Last Starfighter, and more. I can honestly say these films helped shape my childhood and how I viewed the world around me. As my mother held me in her arms telling me E.T. was not going to die, I felt a pain I had not ever felt before. These movies and they way they were deliveredonscreenย affected children during this time period.
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