Wednesday, November 26, 2025

‘Stranger Things 5 – Vol. 1’ Review: Netflix Saga Battles Its Own Legacy in Penultimate Showdown

Stranger Things 5
Courtesy of Netflix

Let’s get something straight from the top: I am in the bag for Stranger Things. I’ve been a fan since Season 1, and at some low points in my life over the last decade, this show offered real comfort. I’m coming into this with an open heart and optimistic eyes.

But even I can see the wear and tear as the series moves into the first part of its fifth and final season—and not because some of the “kids” are now in their late 20s and early 30s. Make all the age jokes you want, but the real issue is how much there is to resolve, and how closely the show’s lore-obsessed fandom is tracking every detail. From the start, Stranger Things 5 is fully aware of these expectations, and it often creaks under their weight, creating an uneven return whose epic scope can’t quite mask a mad dash to the finish. It’s still the show we love, but now it feels like a battle not just for Hawkins, but for the series’ own legacy.

Months after a rift tore open across Hawkins, exposing the world to the Upside Down, life has—on the surface—settled into a new normal. The city is under military quarantine, Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown) is still in hiding, and the government is hunting for her. Meanwhile, the rest of the kids are doing their best to move forward. Will (Noah Schnapp), Mike (Finn Wolfhard), Dustin (Gaten Matarazzo), and Lucas (Caleb McLaughlin) are finishing high school. Nancy (Natalia Dyer), Steve (Joe Keery), Jonathan (Charlie Heaton), and Robin (Maya Hawke) run a pirate radio station sharing news, music, and updates on the crisis. Max (Sadie Sink) remains in a coma, while Joyce (Winona Ryder) and Hopper (David Harbour) help Eleven prepare for the fight ahead.

Courtesy of Netflix

And at night, everyone becomes a covert ops team—using years of monster-fighting experience to track the elusive and all-powerful Vecna (Jamie Campbell Bower) in the Upside Down while evading the military. They all sense something bigger coming. The race is on to stop Vecna before he executes a master plan involving Will, who’s been targeted since the very beginning.

For the spoiler-wary: this is just the table-setting. These four episodes (each at least an hour, many longer) are packed with nonstop planning, adventuring, and problem-solving. The show still moves like a bullet train, even if the cracks in its formula are more visible this time.

Those cracks mostly come down to dialogue. More than any other season, Stranger Things 5 is full of what I’d call “second-screen dialogue.” Netflix knows many viewers multitask, which leads to lines that are redundant, over-explanatory, and often clunky. These characters have been in this mess for years—they know the stakes—yet they keep re-explaining plot points as if half the group just showed up. Every mythology-heavy show eventually needs exposition, but the best ones weave it in with finesse. Here, when the show drags, it really drags. Even this gifted cast can’t always save dialogue like “We have to stop him. We have to stop Vecna.”

Still, the ensemble remains a fireworks display of charisma. The sheer size of the cast leads to some characters getting sidelined, but even those on the margins make an impression. And to the show’s credit, many characters genuinely evolve: Dustin and Eleven’s lingering survivor’s guilt, Robin’s growing confidence in her queerness, and her connection with a still-uncertain Will. Even when stuck delivering lore dumps, the cast keeps things watchable. And when the missions kick in and the emotional dynamics lock into place, that old magic returns—especially for Maya Hawke, Joe Keery, Natalia Dyer, and Gaten Matarazzo.

Courtesy of Netflix

That “old magic” is more than a feeling—it’s a core thematic thread. Early in the season, the kids confront their reputations around town: troublemakers, occult weirdos, maybe even killers. They hear the whispers, see the looks, and internalize the judgment. It mirrors the real experience of these young actors growing up inside one of the most dominant pop-culture forces of the past decade. Everyone is waiting for them to succeed or fail, and they’re harder on themselves than anyone else. You can almost feel Matt and Ross Duffer working through their own anxieties in the scripts—trying to honor what the show has become while fighting to preserve the spark that made it special. It can make the season feel restless and checklist-driven, but the self-awareness adds texture. This is a show wrestling with itself, trying to reclaim its identity. That tension is compelling.

And that’s why Stranger Things 5, despite clunky dialogue, pacing issues, and occasionally dubious visuals (the episode directed by Frank Darabont is a standout exception), remains absorbing for longtime fans. This season isn’t designed to draw in new viewers. It’s about payoffs, long-promised answers, and shaping an ending for a series that’s grown far beyond what anyone imagined a decade ago. It’s big, funny, scary, and sincere. Even with the bumps, that beating heart is still there—and I’m genuinely eager to see where this finale lands.

Stranger Things 5: Volume 1 is now streaming on Netflix.

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