Stranger Things Season 5 Review - A Glorious, Emotional Final Run That Will Leave You Yelling With Joy
Stranger Things Season 5 Review - Final season
The end has finally arrived. After almost a decade of demogorgons, Mind Flayers, and Christmas-light alphabets, Stranger Things Season 5 — the fifth and final chapter — lands on Netflix, delivering one of the most luxurious, heartfelt, and spectacular farewells in television history. Yes, the kids are no longer kids. Yes, they all visibly look in their mid-20s now. But somehow, against all odds, the Duffer Brothers have managed to make this final season feel like the ultimate love letter to everything that made the show a global phenomenon.
The Kids Grew Up — But the Magic Never Left
One of the biggest questions heading into Season 5 was simple: can a show built entirely around children on BMX bikes fighting interdimensional monsters still work when those children now look old enough to rent cars and file taxes? The answer, miraculously, is yes — and it works better than anyone had the right to expect.
The Duffers cleverly shrink the world. Hawkins, Indiana is no longer a living, breathing town filled with oblivious parents and suspicious teachers. It’s a ghost town under military lockdown, half-swallowed by the Upside Down. The focus is laser-tight on our core group — Eleven, Mike, Dustin, Lucas, Will, Max, Nancy, Steve, Robin, Joyce, and Hopper — as they launch one final, desperate assault on Vecna and the forces of darkness.
By stripping away the outside world, Stranger Things Season 5 transforms into something closer to an epic five-hour movie (spread across the first four episodes released now, with three more coming at Christmas and the supersized finale on New Year’s Day). And what a movie it is.
A Flame-Throwing, Bullet-Dodging, Heart-Exploding Spectacle
From the very first minutes, Season 5 dives headfirst into action. Episode one is pure setup — tense, deliberate, and dripping with dread. By episode four, you’re watching one of the most expensive-looking, jaw-dropping sequences ever put on television: flamethrowers roaring, bullets flying, portals ripping open the sky, and characters you’ve loved for nine years pulling off impossible stunts while screaming plans at each other over walkie-talkies.
There is a moment — no spoilers — toward the end of episode four that is so perfectly executed, so earned after years of buildup, that viewers will literally stand up and cheer. It’s the kind of television catharsis that only comes once or twice in a generation.
Will Byers Finally Takes Center Stage — And It’s Beautiful
While the action is relentless, the heart of Season 5 belongs to Will Byers (Noah Schnapp). After being sidelined for much of the later seasons, Will is finally — and powerfully — moved to the forefront. The show returns to the very first scene of the entire series (that flickering light, that terrified boy on his bike) and uses it as the emotional foundation for everything that follows.
Will’s journey — including his long-hinted-at sexuality and his deep, unspoken feelings — is handled with a level of care, honesty, and raw emotion that elevates the entire season. This isn’t just fan service. It’s one of the most moving coming-of-age stories ever told within a monster-hunting sci-fi epic.
A Love Letter to the 80s — And to Itself
The references come thick and fast: The Exorcist lighting, Home Alone-style booby traps, Back to the Future time-bending tension, Jurassic Park gates creaking open, even a wild nod to the bizarre 1985 Canadian kids’ film The Peanut Butter Solution. But more than anything, Season 5 feels like Stranger Things paying tribute to Stranger Things — remixing its own greatest hits into something bold, familiar, and deeply satisfying.
Dustin is still the gadget genius. Robin is still the fast-talking comic relief. Eleven is still the quiet powerhouse. Steve is still… Steve. And somehow, even though they’re all adults now, it works. The chemistry that made the show magical in 2016 is still there in 2025 — only now it’s deeper, richer, and more emotional than ever.
Yes, It’s Time to Say Goodbye — But What a Way to Go
Stranger Things could have limped to the finish line. It could have felt tired, overstretched, or desperate to cling on. Instead, Season 5 feels like the show grabbing a flamethrower, cranking Kate Bush up to eleven, and going out in the most spectacular blaze of glory imaginable.
This final season is proof that sometimes, when a story knows it’s time to end, it can reach heights it never touched before. Stranger Things Season 5 isn’t just good television — it’s one of the most joyful, emotional, and flat-out entertaining farewells any show has ever been given.
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