Gangly Kids on Bicycles Try to Change the World

Maybe nothing feels more quintessentially American right now than fighting Russian bad guys and mind control, and so that’s what happens in this season of “Stranger Things,” the cultish Netflix hit fueled in part by nostalgia for 1980s Americana.

The last we saw of the precocious kids in Hawkins, Ind., Eleven had used her powers to close the portal between their world and the Upside Down, the shadowy realm out of which monsters had been slithering. By the end of the finale, she and the rest of the gang were all happily coupled up during a school dance, under the impression that they were finally safe and together.

In the beginning of Season Three, they’re neither. Mike, Eleven, Max, Lucas and Will realize something is amiss in Hawkins, and begin investigating the strange behavior of some of their neighbors, brought on by the Mind Flayer, a familiar monster. Meanwhile, Dustin —the sixth member of their gang — is busy cracking an intercepted Russian code, aided by Steve and Robin, Steve’s co-worker at the ice cream shop in the mall. Nancy and Jonathan are interns for the newspaper as a photographer and a beleaguered secretary, respectively, putting up with the male reporters’ crass sexist jokes and shady unwillingness to investigate certain stories. Though they’re all split up, the kids are unwittingly working not only with each other, but with Joyce (Will and Jonathan’s mom) and Detective Hopper (Eleven’s father figure) to defeat the Mind Flayer and the coldblooded Russian scientists who are attempting to break open the portal that gives it its strength.

Despite some holes that could be poked through the fabric of the plot — it’s unclear why exactly the Russians want to reopen the gate, for example —this season handles the kids’ growth into teenagers with warmth and humor. Max and Eleven develop a friendship that, while stemming in part from Max’s droll lessons on how to handle a boyfriend, also includes the maxim “there’s more to life than stupid boys, you know.” The addition of Robin and the evolution of her friendship with Steve is one of the highlights of the season, and a standout Netflix debut for Maya Hawke. 

Part of the appeal of “Stranger Things” comes from its unsubtle infusion of modern anxieties into symbols of a purportedly less complicated era. Several pivotal scenes take place at the sparkling new mall (which is stamping out small businesses), the communal swimming pool, and the Fourth of July celebration hosted by a mayor who believes deeply in a bread and circuses approach to reelection. Throughout this season, there are some flashbacks to the first, and everyone I know who watches the show — all under 30, I should mention — has expressed the same shock: the kids look so young.  These flashbacks compel a startling confrontation of our own willingness to trust them to save the town, and it feels like this willingness runs deeper than the usual required suspension of disbelief. The image of these gangly kids on bicycles armed with only their wits and walkie-talkies can’t help but bring to mind images of kids in real life calling for action against climate change and guns in schools, trying to hold adults accountable and failing through no fault of their own. This season of “Stranger Things” has the kids starting to truly grapple with their reliance on Eleven’s superpowers for the first time; adult viewers may find themselves uncomfortably doing the same. 

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