After the big Vecna/Henry/One reveal, the crew puts their various plans into motion. A recap of “Papa,” episode eight of season four of Netflix's 'Stranger ...
She kneels at his side, and in the greatest power move, when he begs her to tell him that she understands he did everything he did because he loved her, she refuses to give him that last win. They escape the prison through sewage pipes and arrive at Yuri’s stash house only to learn that he only has a helicopter to get them home. Their beeping distracts the military guys in the helicopter long enough for Eleven to get her bearings, and I know I’ve already said it, but it deserves to be repeated: She summons all of her strength and she brings that helicopter down in one giant, flaming crash. She realizes that Brenner was pushing her to her breaking point and forcing her to explore that dark void under false pretenses of tracking the Soviets because he was obsessed with finding One in the Upside Down. His anger led to Eleven opening that first gate in 1983. Dampening the power of his best weapon like a real idiot, Brenner is left to carry Eleven out of the bunker to safety. And when Owens and Brenner give her the full rundown of what has been happening — and is about to happen — in Hawkins at the (creepy, long) hands of Vecna, she uses her other power to check in on her friends in that dark void of hers. It’s quite the opposite: If Eleven’s journey this season is all about her finally believing that she is not a monster, then of course it would always come down to her realizing who the actual monster is and confronting him. Dr. Owens reminds his colleague that this isn’t a prison and Eleven is free to come and go as she pleases, but then Brenner turns around and has Owens handcuffed to a pipe and locks Eleven in a room with him. When she wakes up, she finds that she’s been collared in that device Brenner used to torture the other kids in her program. Aside from once again trying to make Eleven believe in his twisted family fantasy, he also knows where to hit her so it hurts — he tells her that she is only acting out because of the guilt she feels for freeing One and for causing all of this death and destruction. Did you use it wisely, or did you spend the whole time listening to Kate Bush and thinking about how you will slowly walk out into the sea if the body count at the end of this season — you know there is going to be a body count — includes Hopper or Steve? And then they realize that if Vecna is looking to make four separate gates, he must make four kills.
Nancy is also in the Hawkins Lab, or at least her consciousness is. Her physical form is still comatose in the Upside-Down, but Vecna is dog-walking her ...
Brenner is able to escape with Eleven, and he protects her from a sniper by taking a few rounds in the back, eventually collapsing. Between Brenner explaining things to Eleven, and Nancy recounting her experiences in the Upside-Down to the rest of the gang, we begin to get a sense of what Vecna’s plan actually is. Yuri’s transport is barely flight-worthy; the psycho religious nutjob basketball team just so happens to be at War Zone, and Brenner tries to prevent Eleven from leaving by taking Owens hostage and threatening her into continuing her work with “Papa”. Having now seen as much as she needs to, she knows that Brenner’s obsession with One and her has led to so much carnage in and around Hawkins; that he’s the monster, not her. In other words, he’ll have to leave his physical form behind, vulnerable, in the attic of the house, when he’s out on a killing spree. Her physical form is still comatose in the Upside-Down, but Vecna is dog-walking her psyche through the scene of the massacre, letting her see where he has been. “Chapter Eight: Papa” opens with a two-minute recap and then picks up for a few seconds right where we left off, with “eldrich thrumming”, according to the subtitles, and a bloody-eyed Eleven having just shoved who we now know to be Vecna through a portal to the Upside-Down. Did she create the Upside-Down behind that cracked wall in Hawkins Lab, installing Vecna as its defacto king, or was it already waiting, lurking, for someone as morally compromised and telekinetically powerful as Henry Creel to make a home there?
On Stranger Things Season 4 Episode 8, more answers come to light as Eleven prepares for vengeance. Read our review of the midseason...
It did have some minor issues, but it got the ball rolling on the series in a big way, and I can't wait to see where it goes next. The tension in Russia is rising, and it only reiterated my initial concerns about the storyline. And Holly. Mike. And they... It was the most vulnerable Will's been, and I'm not sure Mike understood what happened, but Jonathan sure did. And then... And the dam will burst. And this... Hopefully, Eleven makes it back in time to join in this big fight. Eleven using her powers to take down the helicopter was satisfying. They need a fall guy, and if Brenner isn't alive to be that person, then Owens may be their next best shot. And when that happens, Hawkins will fall.Brenner And eventually, it will reach a breaking point.
Vecna shows Nancy a glimpse aboiut what he's going to do in Hawkins and how he'll entering the city.
The entire group gets really nervous about it and is now working to stop Vecna. He tells her to tell her everything that she saw to Eleven so that she could know that Vecna is coming to wreak havoc. Steve was trying hard to bring her back and the entire group was looking for one musical hit that would save Nancy from the evil monster.
Papa is named after the cruelly ironic name by which the Hawkins Lab kids refer to their captor Dr Brenner, while Eleven's other father Hopper battles to get ...
Papa does not tell the truth, and Eleven realises that she opened the gate to the Upside Down not because she's a monster but because Brenner was trying to fix his mistake. A full-on shoot-out ensues, complete with a sniper in a Huey picking off Papa. Fortunately the pizza van crew are just in time to distract the chopper crew -- and Eleven doesn't need need thirty minutes or less to spectacularly take down the helicopter. Robin spotting her crush in a redneck gun shop called The War Zone is an extremely contrived moment, but it still kind of gets me in the feels so let's allow it. Either way, Eleven leaves him to die in the dust. This has drawn criticism from fans who criticise the tired trope of depicting tragic gay characters forever doomed to unrequited relationships (and all this right after Pride Month, too). Still, maybe there's hope for Robin in episode 9, as her Molly Ringwald-esque crush at least looks conflicted when she spots Robin. File that away for season 5, I guess, but in the meantime, as much as I've enjoyed Hopper's action-packed adventures behind the Iron Curtain (and the antics of the madcap Yuri), I'm starting to wish they'd just get out of Russia already. Vecna stalks Nancy through a nightmarish vision of the massacre at Hawkins Lab that led to young Henry Creel being sent to the Upside Down, but then spares her -- instructing her to tell Eleven everything she's seen. Sadly both the show's gay characters are crushed by their crushes in this episode, as both Will and Robin realize they're in love with characters who are shown as being straight. Eleven reluctantly allows Dr Brenner to reactivate her powers, in the process learning she inadvertently created the demon when she zapped the Hawkins lab's first psychic teen, Henry Creel, into the Upside Down. Meanwhile sheriff Jim Hopper and Joyce try to escape a demogorgon in a brutal Russian gulag. Now she knows her own backstory, she makes a choice to fight for her friends. So essentially that moment was the origin story both for Vecna and for the lost, scared Eleven we've watched grow since season 1. Stranger Things is back for the final showdown.
Stranger Things returns - and everyone's on a road trip headed toward the season finale.
“Papa”, despite its maddening construction, hums along even though a lot of it is unnecessary and nonsensical – it does so by properly setting the tone through characters like Nancy and Max, who are ready to illegally modify shotguns and stop playing “Running Up That Hill” (respectively) so we can find a goddamn resolution in all of this. As a penultimate episode, this is to be expected to some degree – but nearly everything character-centric is tamped out in service of the plot, which is really just “three cars driving to destinations” for 90% of its running time. She hates that she loves Dr. Brenner, that she still sees him as her father and the man who believed in her potential; but as her abuser and imprisoner, that dichotomy will never allow for emotional resolution between characters. Look, the Brenner/Eleven dynamic has proved a rewarding one over the years, a compelling portrayal of a psychopath with a degree given free rein by the government to enslave children. I mean, “Papa” is a road trip (well, three of them) featuring test tube babys, tons of sci-fi mumbo jumbo, enormously evil military entities, and long segments of nothing happening – could it be anymore Kojima? Cultural parallels aside, “Papa” feels like much of Volume I preceding it; full of interesting ideas and strong performances, thoroughly hindered by a lumbering plot with too many competing ingredients.
Spoiler Alert. Netflix. [Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for the Stranger Things Season 4 “Chapter Eight: Papa.”] Earlier this week ...
Dmitri (Tom Wlaschiha) leads the group through a sewer and out into the wilderness before he demands that Yuri fly them to the United States. The crazed Yuri promises he can do this for a price, though it turns out his getaway vehicle is a disaster waiting to happen. Nancy is set free from the Upside Down to deliver this message to Eleven, but instead, she comes up with a plan to return to the netherworld and slay Vecna. In a season of intense and high-octane action sequences, the showdown in the desert is right up there with the best. But there’s also Eddie ( Joseph Quinn) and Dustin play fighting before Eddie tells his fellow Hellfire Club member to “never change.” Lucas ( Caleb McLaughlin) and Max have a heart-to-heart where Max says she will protect herself from Vecna in her happiest memory, which just so happens to include Lucas. Steve reveals his dream to Nancy of having a brood of kids to take on vacation. Those scenes lead me to believe that the Party will not be the same following the upcoming battle with Vecna. Someone is probably saying goodbye for good. Eleven, Mike, and the Byers boys are now on their way to Hawkins, where Vecna is just one kill away from opening the gates to eternal destruction. As the smoke clears and Brenner breathes his last few breaths, Mike ( Finn Wolfhard) and the pizza van crew arrive. You are the monster,” Eleven says, before Brenner injects her, causing her to pass out before she has a chance to escape. It becomes clear that Vecna is at the heart of all the chaos and destruction thrust upon Hawkins. Brenner was never trying to protect Eleven; he was using her to find his pet project. Eleven realizes this as Brenner tries to stop her from leaving and returning to Hawkins to save her friends. But before Brenner can send Eleven back into the NINA pod, Lt. Colonel Jack Sullivan (Sherman Augustus) and his gun-toting soldiers descend on the lab with one objective in mind — kill the girl. At the end of Vol. 1, we learned that Eleven was responsible for creating Vecna, who it turns out is Jamie Campbell Bower‘s creepy orderly, aka One, aka Henry Creel — “What are we calling him now?” Robin ( Maya Hawke) asks later in the episode, echoing my thoughts while writing this recap.
While Nancy catches her breath in Hawkins, let's check in on the Russia crew. The Demogorgon is still a-rippin, and our heroes (and Yuri) need to find a way out ...
“They’ve come to kill you,” Papa tells Eleven, scooping her up and taking her into the open, away from the firefight in the lab. El tells her friends that they need to get to Hawkins, stat, or “they are going to die.” In the RV, lots of Intense Faces and Determined Staring Out the Window from our heroes as the extremely on-the-nose lyrics kick in: “Sleepless nights, losing hope, I’m reaching for you, you, you.” Max gets out of the RV with Lucas and Erica, Walkman strapped to her waist. She has a sweet reunion with both Mike and Will, then with a click, her collar snaps open, falling to the ground. He tells her that everything he’s done has been for her own protection, including torturing her mother and One. She brings up One’s revelation that “Papa doesn’t always tell the truth,” and he tries to gaslight her into thinking that she’s feeling guilty for releasing him. Lucas and Max are also bonding, with Max telling him she’ll “hide in the light” and pull a real Patronus-esque happy memory, admitting that he was involved in that memory. Max’s idea is to “ditch Kate Bush” and use herself as bait, allowing the others to attack Vecna’s vulnerable body in his attic hideout while he tries to kill her. They realize that the clock in the visions has always chimed four times, and that that must be telegraphing his plan to make four kills, meaning he only needs one more. Until now.” The duo really put the “uhhhhhh” in “reassuring” when they say that her friends in Hawkins are safe “as far as we know,” but that they haven’t actually checked. But you make her feel like she’s not a mistake at all, like she’s better for being different, and that gives her the courage to fight on. The Demogorgon is still a-rippin, and our heroes (and Yuri) need to find a way out of there. “I want you to tell Eleven. I want you to tell her everything you see.” In the real world, or at least, halfway between the Upside Down and the real world, Steve is holding her entranced body.
Papa does not tell the truth as Eleven faces Vecna in the intense final episodes of Stranger Things 4. (Spoilers!)
Papa does not tell the truth, and Eleven realizes that she opened the gate to the Upside Down not because she's a monster but because Brenner was trying to fix his mistake. A full-on shoot-out ensues, complete with a sniper in a Huey picking off Papa. Fortunately the pizza van crew are just in time to distract the chopper crew -- and Eleven doesn't need 30 minutes or less to spectacularly take down the helicopter. Sadly both of the show's gay characters are crushed by their crushes in this episode, as both Will and Robin realize they're in love with characters who appear to be straight. Robin spotting Vickie in a redneck gun shop called The War Zone is a contrived moment, but it still kind of gets me in the feels, so let's allow it. Eleven blows the door off the hinges, but Brenner drugs her. This has drawn criticism from fans who criticise the tired trope of depicting tragic gay characters forever doomed to unrequited relationships (and all this right after Pride Month, too). Still, maybe there's hope for Robin in episode 9, as her Molly Ringwald-esque crush Vickie at least looks conflicted when she spots Robin. Hopper shows what he thinks of their scientific method with a bullet, only to discover a whole lab full of monsters from the Upside Down and some kind of portal. Vecna, also known as Henry or One, stalks Nancy through a nightmarish vision of the massacre at Hawkins Lab that led to young Henry Creel being sent to the Upside Down. But the demon spares her -- instructing her to tell Eleven everything she's seen. Eleven reluctantly allowed Dr Brenner to reactivate her powers, in the process learning that she inadvertently created the demon when she zapped the Hawkins lab's first psychic teen, Henry Creel, into the Upside Down. Meanwhile sheriff Jim Hopper and Joyce tried to escape a demogorgon in a brutal Russian gulag. But in the meantime, as much as I've enjoyed Hopper's action-packed adventures behind the Iron Curtain (and the antics of the madcap Yuri), I'm starting to wish they'd just get out of Russia already. Now she knows her own backstory, she makes a choice to fight for her friends. The Duffer Brothers definitely know how to torture these characters (and us). Vulnerable moments between Mike and Will or Lucas and Max or Dustin and Eddie make you fear for the safety of these characters we know and love.
Stranger Things fans have waited about a month for the final two episodes of season 4 to release on Netflix, and thankfully the wait is now over.
Brenner is able to escape with Eleven by carrying her, and even protects her from a sniper in a helicopter by taking a few shots to the back, eventually collapsing. Brenner tries to prevent Eleven from leaving by taking Owens hostage and threatening Eleven. Eleven, however, has her memories back now and knows what a horrible man Brenner is, and she finally gives him a piece of her mind, placing the blame for all of the horrible things that have happened in Hawkins on him and calling him a monster. The group theorizes that given Henry is just like Eleven, the way he projects his consciousness must be the same, meaning he’ll have to leave his physical form vulnerable in the attic of his old house in the Upside Down while he’s out trying to complete his evil plan. Between Brenner explaining his understanding of the situation to Eleven and Nancy recounting her experience trapped in Henry’s curse while in the Upside Down, we are finally starting to understand the full picture of this evil plan that is underway. Henry instructs Nancy to tell Eleven what she has seen here and what is coming for her and her friends. Stranger Things fans have waited about a month for the final two episodes of season 4 to release on Netflix, and thankfully the wait is now over.