Stranger Things 4 from kids to teenagers !

 stranger things 4, eleven, stranger things

Stranger Things 4 is bigger than before, that's for sure. Almost every chapter in Volume 1 of seven episodes is longer than 70 minutes, with Stranger Things Season 4 Episode 7 taping at 100 minutes.However, you will never feel that the episodes are too long. Even when you get to the last scene, you'll wish there were more. This season tends to immerse itself more in the element of horror, not hesitating for a moment, using the style of sudden scary moments, bloody scenes, and tense events to leave viewers in a state of constant fear and anticipation. Especially the scenes in which the new monster appears, which is full of intricate and frightening details in its form that resembles coiled snakes.

 Thanks to the three-year gap between seasons, kids are more mature than ever. I can imagine that some viewers were thrown at them by how some of the actors outdid their characters. They are so visibly bigger that Stranger Things 4 ends up using aging de-aging technology on teens for flashback scenes, usually a tactic reserved for older actors like Robert De Niro in The Irishman or Samuel L. Captain Marvel. While it revisits some old-fashioned horror in places, Stranger Things 4 is also throwing more CGI monsters at us.

But in an effort to be bigger, scarier, and longer than ever, Stranger Things 4  still run by creators Matt and Ross Duffer aka The Duffer Brothers, as lead writers and principal directors ends up feeling a lot like standard-type things. Like her. The biggest problem isn't that the new season of the hit Netflix series has a formula. He lacks joy and humor. Stranger Things 4 is so engrossed in its plot that he forgets what made previous seasons so exciting. No loud mall signs (Stranger Things 3), nor any Ghostbusters (Stranger Things 2) nostalgia. Attempts to activate actions in Stranger Things 4 are few and far between.At times, Stranger Things 4 seems more interested in subverting audience expectations than in providing a coherent story as their group regroups as a whole.

Of course, it doesn't help that the loops are too long. And while the first seven-episode volume might look like it's almost 80 percent of the way through Season 4, it's not. The final two episodes are full-length, with director and executive producer Sean Levy revealing that they are longer than the two Ryan Reynolds films — the action-comedy Free Guy and the science-fiction adventure The Adam Project — made during Stranger Things. Three years off. This means that Volume 1 may be closer to two-thirds of the way. It is a long end game. But critics have not been given access to it, so this review is only for Volume 1.


Eleven takes us on a journey from memories of the past, which reveals many secrets to us and answers many questions that have always been aroused by all viewers during the previous seasons. But it may stretch too long sometimes. Because of the large number of characters and stories and the need to move between them all in this season, and the intensity and intensity of events, the series sometimes takes a long time to return to a group of friends. With so much tension and anticipation, I sometimes felt that L's story slowly flashing back in time was taking too long and could have been condensed a lot more into half an episode and moving on to all the other action we've been waiting for.

But this does not mean that her story is unimportant, quite the contrary. Where the snapshots of the past reveal to us many of the revelations that we have been waiting for, so that we (we and together) learn everything that happened in her past, why the Hawkins Laboratory was established in the first place, and what happened to the rest of her friends who were with her, and most of all, the series reveals to us finally The origin of the inverted side, why L is targeted, and why the villain does everything he does.

After 3 years of waiting, Stranger Things Season 4 Volume 1 of Stranger Things manages to surpass all our hopes and expectations. It is very ambitious, leans on the horror elements a lot more than the previous seasons, and offers great visual effects for monsters, flip side, and more. Although it sometimes suffers from slowdowns due to the large number of sub-plots that it presents, and some characters are marginalized because they do not get enough time, it paves the way for volume 2, which is clearly going to present a great epic that surpasses everything we saw in the series previously.



Episode 7 ends at a very defining moment, of course, leaving us eager to see the second volume coming on July 1st. Although Volume 2 consists of only two episodes, Episode 8 will be an hour and 25 minutes long, and Episode 9 will be about two and a half hours long. Which makes them almost like a season in itself. And from what we've seen from the trailer for Volume 2 that appears after the end of Volume 1, it's clear that we're going to have a great epic that surpasses everything we've seen before in the series.

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