STRANGER THINGS: THE FIRST SHADOW SPOILERS - ALAN MUNSON
here is a compilation of all things I can recall from the play involving Alan Munson
also to note: some things I am still a little confused about and will need to verify when I see it again soon. I will update as I remember things!
He's a greaser, slicked hair and leather jacket
A failed flirt
Also a drama kid, which makes so much sense
I think this is an acting choice on Max Harwood's part (bless you, BLESS YOU) but he even does the now-iconic Eddie pose of the fingers above the head and tongue out while teasing Walter and Henry in the high school
Cast in Joyce's play and seems to take the 'method' approach - very dedicated to his character and the performance, very stressed about the first show and things not being prepared - losing themselves in fantasy and performance seems ot be in the Munson genes
Hopper suspects him heavily for the pet killings and 'interrogates' him more than others
Interestingly, no mention or reference to Wayne that I could catch
Alan is in one of the final scenes as the new local 'Santa' at Christmas-time, though is shown to eb slurring his words and stumbling, clearly now a drunkard - a hint of the beginning of his descent into the troubled father who Eddie describes in ST4
Can we talk about Alan Munson? Because I'd like to talk about AllenâI mean AlanâMunson.
As you all probably know, I read Flight of Icarus yesterday. (Yeah, the entire book. Cover to cover. This should tell you what I was like as a child.) And like I said before, the bits and pieces of Al Munson that Caitlin gives us are delectable.
Al Munson, overall, is flirtatious and glib, but he's got a dark underbelly to his personality that's been dogging him since his school days.
Flirtatious and glib:
But prone to snap changes between charming and dickish:
One might even say he's...moody:
And from what both Hopper and Principal Higgins says, this track record of behavior extends back to his school days:
Al Munson: Charming, flirty, troublemaker, outcast...moody.
What really interests me, though, is that Hopper says Al was in school a few years behind him.
Hop's age (senior, 17-18) in TFS lines up perfectly with his supposed age in 1983 per the S1E1 script:
However, as others have pointed out (The screenshot below being lifted from Ami's post about age fuckery in TFS), the same doesn't apply to Joyce:
Well. It doesn't apply to Alan either.
Alan Munson would have been 14-15 years old when Hopper was in his senior year.
So why does Alan also seem to be in with the seniors? He's clearly familiar with Joyce, far more familiar than a freshman would be with a senior:
And so far she's is confirmed to be a senior in TFS, regardless of what the scripts for the show tell us.
Stranger Things: The First Shadow
(My spoiler-filled review and thoughts)
âNerds, do you copy?â
Buckle up, because this is a long one! I've tried to remember as much as I can from when I saw the play on Dec 5th.
Disclaimer: This is in no way a complete recollection of things that happened. They really packed a LOT into it. This is just what I can personally recall, helped along by other reviews and recollections Iâve found online that sparked my memory.Â
If you don't want to be spoiled, don't read any further!
Act 1.
After an epic intro scene, where soldiers on a ship at sea get dragged off by demogorgons (more on this later), weâre shown the Stranger Things intro exactly as though weâre watching an episode.
Chapter One: The Girl from Nowhere.
Hawkins, 1959.Â
It opens with a young Bob Newby on air, talking on his radio show (the founder of Hawkins AV club! <3). We learn that he actually has an adopted sister, Patty Newby. Sheâs black, so she feels like an outsider (bear in mind itâs the 1950s/60s, so⊠yeah.) Principle Newby, their father and only remaining parent, is also very religious.Â
Heâs also the pastor (?) at the local church, and often makes Patty go to the church with him. She admits to Bob that she only likes to go to listen in on peopleâs confessions (some of which are really juicy). She also enjoys the choir there (?) as she likes to sing. Â
Principal Newby doesnât like that Bob and Patty read comic books. Thereâs talk about how some things are discouraged or outright forbidden because they involve sex (gasp!) and morally ambiguous behaviour. Patty in particular is looked down on by her father for acting rebellious. He disapproves of her answering him back.Â
Instead of praying to God, Patty prays to Wonder Woman.
One of the first sections in the showâs programme is dedicated to the impact of comic books and science fiction on kids in the 1950s:
[This has always been the way with fiction. Whether you are talking about adventure, fantasy or sci-fi, stories set in faraway places reflect the anxieties of the here and now. Just as the children in Stranger Things turn to a fantasy game to help them make imaginative sense of a dangerous world, so we escape to alien landscapes to think about ourselves. As South Africa novelist Lauren Beukes once said, âBy imagining the unimaginable, itâs possible to make reality more bearable.â]
[As Patty in Stranger Things: The First Shadow is aware, however, whether male or female, superheroes were almost exclusively white. Unless you happened to get hold of a copy of All-Negro Comics, published in 1947 by Black journalist Orrin Cromwell Evans, Black children would not see themselves represented in popular culture.]
[... in this age of technological advance and political uncertainty, [comic books] provided the thrills, the escapism and the imaginative fuel that audiences, young and old, needed more than ever.â]Â - Mark Fisher
Next, weâre introduced to Joyce. Sheâs Joyce Maldonado at this point. Sheâs half undressed and trying to find her clothes, obviously fooling around with Lonnie Byers, who is already talking down to her in a very casual way, telling her sheâll never amount to anything and that sheâll never leave Hawkins like she dreams of. It was another example of only physical attraction existing between two characters - thereâs little to no emotional compatibility there. I sort of had the vibe that the scene was effectively introducing Joyce and Lonnieâs unequal power dynamics as they are in the show moving forwards. Lonnie sits with his legs encasing Joyce as they both sit on a mattress, and sheâs visibly vulnerable in her bra, listening to him say these casually demeaning things to her.Â
Joyce wants to direct the school play, although sheâs pretending to Principal Newby that theyâre doing Oklahoma. Oklahoma will serve as a smokescreen for the real play she wants to direct: The Dark of the Moon. This has its own page in the programme too:Â
[From the depths of Scottish folklore to the Broadway stage, the journey of The Dark of the Moon is as shrouded in mystery and intrigue as the contents of the piece itself. Over the course of several hundred years, the story evolved from humble beginnings (The Ballad of Barbara Allen) into something rather darker and more brooding than its simpler folktale roots.]
[In its original versions, it seems to have been an innocent, if tragic, ballad about a young man who dies of unrequited love, only for the grief-stricken object of his affection to follow him to the grave. There, they become a rose and a briar respectively, destined to be intertwined for all eternity.] - The Creel House front door, anyone?
[In 1939, it had somehow become part of the Appalachian mountain lore of the north-eastern USA⊠[sometimes] with a central theme of divorce rather than death. But perhaps its oddest reincarnation is as a regular feature in the annual school play catalogue across the United States⊠retitled The Dark of the Moon, the play recasts Barbara Allen as a young maiden desired by a witch boy whose request to be made human is granted on the condition that she is faithful to him for a year. When that condition is tested to destruction, tragedy naturally (or unnaturally) ensues. The play is rich with allegory, including themes as knotty as religious fanaticism, demonic possession and mob psychology, and with its plot of star-crossed lovers meeting across the divide between this world and a mystical parallel one, itâs a kind of Gothic Romeo and Juliet.]Â
-Michael Davies
In the next few scenes weâre introduced to a whole host of characters as they come into the high school, and eventually gather around for the casting of Joyceâs play:
Ted Wheeler, school jock, Mr Popular. Very much a âpeaked in high schoolâ vibe. đ
Karen Childress, Tedâs popular cheerleader girlfriend. Ted and Karen are depicted as two teens who can barely keep their hands off each other. They constantly make out. Itâs suggested that Karen is only dating him because heâs popular and um⊠well-endowed.Â
Walter Henderson (who must be Dustinâs dad) is a total dick. Heâs openly racist towards Patty at one point, earning him glares and snappy remarks from both of the Sinclairs who are present at the time. Patty has a horrible nickname at school, âmystery meatâ, because of her unknown origins. But itâs clear with Walter's comments that her race also plays a factor in her general ostracisation.Â
Claudia Yount (Dustinâs Mom). She has a cat called Prancer, and is dating Walter. I thought it was very fan-servicey to include Dustinâs parents at all, because we know canonically that Dustin and his mom only moved to Hawkins when he was 4th Grade. So I guess Claudia and Walter moved away, had Dustin elsewhere, then Claudia came back to Hawkins again with Dustin after Walter had left/divorced her??Â
Sue and Charles Sinclair. Again, it was a cute Easter Egg to include them, but all the parents of the OG boys being there felt very fan-servicey - especially with them all already being coupled up in high school. It felt too unrealistic and a bit jarring. Iâm choosing to take this as they were literally intended as cute little Easter Eggs, and as prime opportunity for comedic relief (e.g. seeing Ted Wheeler as a total player, in total opposition to the Ted we know).Â
Alan Munson. Heâs a little strange and quirky, a lot like Eddie. He has a rock and roll vibe, and sticks out his tongue and does devil horns with his fingers, lol. The others donât seem to know what to make of him, but thereâs no animosity or anything. Heâs really funny in all his scenes.
And of course, Jim Hopper Junior. To me, Young Hopper was like⊠a weird mixture of old Hopper from the show, and Steve! The actor did a great job, but yeah, it was giving Steve more than Hopper in some places (to me, at least). I don't know if this was intentional.
Hopper has some dad issues - his father is the chief of police, and they donât get on. Thereâs a whole scene later on in the show where they even have a physical fight in the police station (although this isnât depicted super seriously, and is actually part of a larger comedic section that involves some of the other cops in the station getting involved for laughs. At the end, Hopper and his dad sort of come to an agreement.) Itâs kind of slapstick. Theyâre all falling over each other, and thereâs even a part where one male cop falls against another face forward onto a desk, and itâs pretty suggestive (one is sort of mounted behind the other). Idk if this was supposed to be a standard âgay jokeâ just for lols, or if it was more that the cops had an unexpected âmomentâ together (they take a while to part from each other, and then they avoid each otherâs eyes, so⊠idk). Just something I noticed happening off to the side.
Anyway, back to Act 1. Weâre taken away from Hawkins High to outside the Creel house, and introduced to the Creels moving into Hawkins, just like they appear in the showâs flashbacks. Theyâve moved from Nevada, and the reason theyâve moved is because something had happened with Henry, and this is meant to be a new start - itâs left ambiguous as to what exactly happened, but thereâs mention of a kid that had been âleft in a wheelchairâ.Â
At first, Virginia Creel seems somewhat loving towards her son, hugging and kissing him and trying to act ânormalâ, but sheâs clearly unsettled by him. Henry is unpredictable, and almost seems to switch between different personalities: one thatâs familiar, shy but friendly, and one that quickly rages and turns violent.Â
Whilst itâs not explained WHY yet, we clearly see that Henry is somehow ALREADY under the influence of the Mind Flayer - and that he has powers.
Virginia becomes more and more openly terrified of Henry as the play goes on. Meanwhile, Victor Creel is generally absent the whole time as heâs dealing with his own âdemonsâ (severe PTSD from the war). People in Hawkins think heâs odd and weird. Remember that nobody understands PTSD at this point in time.Â
Again, we get a spread in the programme about this: âThese are the tranquilized fifties⊠the legacy of trauma in post-war Americaâ:
[It is very likely that Corporal Victor Creel, 9th Airforce, missed the birth of his son Henry in 1945⊠Getting their bodies back to the US would be a huge undertaking⊠getting their minds home would be another problem, and one which no-one had thought to predict.]
[Victor Creel is a familiar figure to us now: shellshocked, prone to outbursts, turning to alcohol to numb his trauma⊠what to do with the man who has seen atrocities - who is in himself a living testament to the fact that they exist, that they happen - who, in Victorâs case, may even have committed them himself? The answer was to bury him. Though shellshock was first given its name in the aftermath of the First World War⊠there was no widespread study of PTSD until after the Vietnam War, even though more than double the amount of American soldiers showed symptoms of PTSD during WW2 than WW1⊠Those suffering on the front were sedated and told they were exhausted⊠once they made it home, they were told not to talk about it: that they were lucky to be alive.]
[One response in particular would have been familiar to the Creels - the child who becomes aloof from their father, and who disengages from the emotional life of the family⊠Much like Jim Hopper and his father, there was often immense love between these children and their fathers, but they had no way to talk about the pain they were feeling.]
-Beth Kelly
Henry is clearly lonely and feels misunderstood when he first moves to Hawkins. Itâs like heâs aware that thereâs a darker side of him thatâs dangerous, but he canât fully explain why he does certain things (e.g whatever he did to the kid left in a wheelchair). Thereâs a scene where he sees the smoke of the Mindflayer swirling around him in the void, and he yells, "What are you??"
Heâs the new kid at Hawkins High. People at school think heâs strange. Theyâre not necessarily cruel to him, but theyâre not really sure how to take him either. Joyce is pleasant to him. But the only person he really connects with is Patty Newby - who we know is also a bit of an outsider at the school because of her peculiar origins and skin colour.
Itâs clear there is an instant connection between Henry and Patty. Henry in particular is obviously crushing on Patty, and acts awkward around her. They bond over their love of comic books, and decide to be friends.Â
Anyway - back to Joyceâs play. So the reason she wants to direct the play in the first place is to impress some visitors from a university, so she can achieve a scholarship to study theatre outside of Hawkins.Â
It involves âwitches, satanism, religious allegoryâ. Lots of things that Principal Newby would definitely disapprove of (hence why she pretends that theyâre doing Oklahoma).Â
Joyce talks about the overarching message: âThatâs what itâs all about in the end, isnât it? Whether love can conquer fear.â (paraphrased). I think that was perhaps a really meta moment, and applies to THIS play and even Stranger Things as a whole.
Also there was something like, âtheyâre witches, not lesbians!â/ âThey were witches as well as lesbiansâ⊠âDoes it matter?â (again, paraphrasing, I canât recall the actual lines, and I think this was either said at this point by Joyce and someone else, or a conversation that happened earlier between Bob and Patty when they were talking about a comic or story they had read. Iâm sorry, I canât remember!) But I thought it could be a reference to the Fear Street trilogy, maybe. I was on the lookout for any kind of LGBTQ+ imagery or dialogue, and yet my brain still managed to forget details by the end of it all (Act 1 needed to be 20 minutes longer, seriously. They went through so much dialogue so quickly, it was difficult to keep up. I feel like I need to see the whole thing again to properly take it all in).
Maybe I was tripping, or maybe I misheard, but I thought there was also a blink-and-youâll-miss-it line about âthe ending is happy and gayâ. I wish my brain would have held onto those lines, but it happened so quickly. Something like, âthe ending will be happy and gayâ⊠âisnât that what everyone wants?â
Now, Iâm certain they meant âgayâ as in âhappyâ in the context, but I couldnât help but side-eye that moment a little because itâs an outdated term in todayâs language. It was, I believe, a quick exchange between Joyce and⊠I want to say Bob? Or possibly Walter? I honestly cannot remember.
I'm begging people not to run away with this because itâs also totally possible that it was said in a derivative sense, like, âthis story is dark, gothic and tragic... not happy and gayâ, you know? "That's what everyone wants, right?" "Maybe, but this ends in tragedy."
I really hope someone, ANYONE else caught these lines, and can give me their own two cents on it. (Curse my shit memory and also just how FAST those lines were coming at us during those scenes in Act 1⊠like guys, please slow down so I can actually take in what youâre saying!)Â
Anyway. Joyce is having trouble casting the main leads, John and Barbara Allen, as the two are lovers and will need to kiss, and nobody seems to have the right chemistry or is taking it seriously enough.Â
At one point, Karen (acting as the female lead) confidently and passionately kisses Bob (acting the male lead), whoâs awkward and flustered afterwards (this is done for the audience lols).Â
After hearing her beautiful singing voice (encouraged by Henry), Joyce decides to cast Patty as her female lead. Meanwhile Henry has unwittingly found himself in this room along with everyone, and accidentally gets involved in the casting process. Joyce sees that Patty and Henry have chemistry together, so she decides to cast Henry as her male lead too.Â
Henry and Patty grow closer. Henry tells Patty that heâs bad, and she should stay away from him. She doesnât listen, and says just because someone has done some bad things, it doesnât make them a bad person.
At one point they sit side by side by the confessional at church. Henry admits to her that he has powers. He tells Patty that he can hear what people are thinking - all the time. It drives him crazy (and says people are always âpretendingâ to be normal. The vibe is very much in tune with his speech in Season 4 about how everyone is just in a silly little play, all playing pretend with each other, all trapped in these notions of living their lives in a way that society thinks is acceptable or desirable).
As an example later on in a separate scene, he points to Karen and Ted and tells Patty, âshe thinks heâs an idiot, and heâs scared of her.â He points to more characters in this scene and says more about them (like Claudia and Walter, Sue and Charles, maybe even Joyce and Hopper?) but unfortunately I can only remember Ted and Karenâs.Â
Patty convinces Henry that his powers are not evil, and that he should be able to control them and use them for good. Henry then creates a "vision" for Patty, where she can freely sing with people listening, and everyone around her joins in and appreciates her talent (I think she sings "Dream a Little Dream of Me"? Unless this happens later on. Thereâs definitely a moment where she sings a bit of that song. Henry associates it with Patty.)
In this vision, even Patty's father is supportive of her and her singing, and itâs quite a funny moment how she imagines him dressed in a saucy red cape, dancing in a way that he *definitely* wouldnât approve of in real life.
So it seems Henry is actually able to show people their dreams as well as their nightmares. It suggests his powers are his own at this point (at least to an extent), and not necessarily always controlled by the Mind Flayer.Â
Victor sees Henry talking to Patty at school, and mentions this to Virginia. He describes it as âharmless, just Puppy Loveâ, a first crush.Â
Virginia is still worried, and tells Henry to stay away from Patty (for her protection). Henry gets angry. We keep hearing his voice change when he changes, like a deep, monstrous voice. Itâs creepy, like itâs not really him in those moments - itâs like the Mindflayer using Henryâs body, speaking through him.Â
While in the attic (his new favourite spot), Henry keeps becoming influenced by the Mind Flayer. He travels to the void frequently, from where he proceeds to start killing animals - the first of which is Dustinâs momâs cat. Itâs just like the Vecna attacks in Season 4, snapping their bones and blinding them.Â
Henry seems to be aware that heâs the one responsible for these killings, and he keeps on going back to the attic, and the void, to keep doing it - but itâs unclear just how aware or remorseful he is about all this, or whether itâs 100% possessed!Henry during those moments. It certainly seems like itâs the Mindflayer making him want to do those things. When he first approaches Prancer, heâs friendly, calm and softly-spoken. The attack happens very suddenly and afterwards, I think Henry sort of âcomes toâ and cries out in distress/remorse?Â
Either way, Henry is definitely under the Mind Flayer's control at that point, and you can see the Mind Flayer smoke flying around in the void next to him.Â
After Claudiaâs cat turns up dead, Hopper is immediately on the case, wanting to find the culprit. He starts questioning people, and ends up approaching Henry at school.
I want to clear Hopperâs name in something here! I saw someone say that, in the play, itâs stated that Hopper says he hates cats. Whilst this *is* something Hopper tells Henry at this point, it was clear to me that Hopper was only playing mind games in the way an investigator will try to get a suspected criminal to confess: âThe truth is, I hate cats. So I actually just want to shake the hand of the person who did it - theyâre a hero in my book!â Heâs totally bluffing, and itâs just meant to show that heâs already thinking and working like a detective. Regardless, the tactic doesnât work, and Henry brushes him off. Hopper remains none the wiser.Â
When more animals start being killed in the same way, Hopper is the one who figures out that theyâre all pets of Hawkins High School students who are taking part in Joyceâs play. He goes to her to request her help, and she and Bob both end up going out to look for clues with him (complete with torches, this gave major Season 1 vibes).Â
Joyce and Hopperâs relationship is mostly antagonistic, but itâs clear they like each other and they flirt a bit. Meanwhile Bob admires Joyce from afar, wanting only to impress her and to find the courage to tell her how he really feels. There's some love triangle imagery throughout with where they stand. (Note: Bob does eventually admit to Joyce how he feels at the end, but she casually rebuffs him. I'm so glad they eventually ended up together because Bob was just too pure.)
Henry continues to be haunted by images of a monster reflected back at him in a mirror. I think weâre meant to take that as a representation of Mind Flayer!possessed Henry. Heâs clearly afraid of himself, and what heâs capable of.Â
The Mind Flayer appears to him as Patty, and taunts him by saying cruel things, like saying that he will end up killing her. In the vision, Patty starts pulling off her own hair until we see her brain. We hear a deep monstrous voice taunting Henry, saying he âwill kill many, many moreâ - that they have seen it happen, and it is his destiny. (Time travel hints? The Mind Flayer can apparently see into his future, unless this was just an empty taunt that unfortunately came true, or a self-fulfilling prophecy).Â
[Evidently, thereâs something deeply disturbing at the heart of the human psyche about the possibility of uncovering the horrific within itself. When that horror is externalised⊠it creates a symbolic representation of our own nightmares, perhaps allowing us to tackle them more objectively and overcome those dark, disturbing impulses within us all.]Â
[By investing fictional creations with the qualities we most fear - the horrifying, animalistic sides of our nature - we can, perhaps, face them more objectively and convince ourselves that we do, ultimately, have control over them⊠and ourselves.]
[... Perhaps the monster we fear most is the one we see reflected in the mirror. As Professor Mulrooney puts it: âThe monsters in these tales are not necessarily the people we would call the monsters - Frankensteinâs creature or Dracula. The scariest part of these books is the humans.â]
-Michael DaviesÂ
The real Patty then interrupts the vision, and asks Henry if he can help her find her mother using his powers. Heâs wary of doing so, but agrees to help her. He says she will have to come with him to his attic.Â
Once inside, Patty tells him that itâs cold in there. Henry says he likes it cold.Â
When Henry enters the void, he successfully locates Pattyâs mom. Sheâs a singer, a show girl, working on a stage in Vegas. Patty asks him what she looks like. Henry says she looks like Patty. That sheâs beautiful.
Suddenly, he loses control, and is once again visited by the Mind Flayer. Pattyâs mom morphs into a terrifying figure who chases Henry through the void⊠and eventually catches him.Â
We see the Mindflayer going into Henry inside the void, very similar to Will in Season 2 on the school field. (This happens either at this moment, or in a flashback at another point of the play. But itâs at some point!!) I think this was showing us that whoever Henry was, heâs fast disappearing into the darkness of the Mind Flayer, and vice versa - itâs like a fusion.Â
Meanwhile, Mr Newby learns that Patty and Henry have been hanging out together a lot. Heâs greatly displeased by this, and decides to go to the Creel House to fetch Patty and put an end to the budding romance. Romeo and Juliet vibes be vibing hard.
Downstairs, he speaks to Victor Creel, who is having a PTSD related episode and acting strangely. He says his wife believes the house is haunted by an ancient demon, and with everything thatâs happened (and by how the lights keep flashing), heâs beginning to believe her. He feels like his demons have followed him from the war.Â
Mr Newby then overhears the commotion from upstairs, and goes up to investigate. In the attic, Henry is holding Pattyâs hand very tightly. Heâs twitching and yelling as he fights against the Mind Flayerâs possession, and this frightens Patty. When her father walks in, he demands that Patty lets go of Henryâs hand. She tries, but heâs holding on too tightly. âI canât!â Patty cries out.
Mr Newby is then attacked by Henry, controlled by the Mind Flayer. His body starts to rise up. Patty encourages Henry to fight back by telling him that she believes he is good, and that she loves him.
âSay it back!â she pleads to him. âSay it back!â
Henry responds and says he loves her too. Because of the love exchange, he manages to momentarily break out of the Mind Flayerâs control: Mr Newby drops to the floor, alive but badly injured.Â
Joyce, Hopper and Bob were downstairs at this point, having followed radio anomalies to the Creel House (which they did via a machine that Bob built for them). They freak out and run away, and all come to the conclusion that creepy, crazy Victor Creel is the one responsible for Mr Newbyâs injuries, as well as the string of violent animal deaths.Â
[Joyce has some basis for believing Victor capable of violent crime, based as this may be in her own fatherâs war experience⊠When Joyce opens her copy of the DSM, first published in 1952, she will find no entry for PTSD⊠Instead, the symptoms she might recognise from her father were incorporated into depression or schizophrenia, rather than their own diagnosis. Short of a name for what they were suffering, traumatised veterans were left to find their own way through nightmares - through violence, alcohol or isolation.]Â
-Beth Kelly (from the Stranger Things: The First Shadow programme)
After the commotion, Henry removes his blindfold. Patty's father has broken through the attic floor, and heâs seriously injured. Patty is very afraid and upset.
After a brief time skip (to the next day or two I think), we learn that Patty is staying away from Henry, who is worried that heâs ruined everything. The Mind Flayer starts to creep back in. We see a possessed Henry back in the attic, and Virginia comes up to him and says that she wants to help him, but she doesnât know how. She reminds him that he needs to stay away from people to protect them. She talks about Patty, telling Henry that he shouldnât see her anymore.
Possessed!Henry smirks and asks her if sheâs jealous. Thereâs something insidious and disturbing in the way he asks it. Virginia recoils from her son and her âeverything-is-going-to-be-okayâ facade crumbles. We see sheâs absolutely terrified of who Henry has become.
Henry creates a vision, so that it appears as though his pet spiders escape from their jars, and they run all over Virginia as she screams. She flees from the attic as Henryâs dark taunts follow her.
Henryâs sister Alice comes to the mouth of the attic.
"Where is Henry?" She asks.
Henry: "Heâs right here."
Alice: "Youâre not him."
At this point, it was like the Mindflayer had almost completely merged with Henry. The lines had become more and more blurred as the play went on, and now itâs becoming hard to separate them - the ârealâ Henry is finding it hard to come through and fight the possession. The Mind Flayer is winning.Â
This really reminded me of Will and his own possession with the Mindflayer in Season 2. How they described it like a virus taking over, and how Will could have continued âdisappearingâ until there was no more Will left.Â
After the incident with Mr Newby, and her terror with Henry in the attic, Virginia has finally had enough. She willingly hands her son over to an âinterested partyâ who describes himself as a doctor (who we know is Dr Brenner). He vows to take Henry to Hawkins Lab, where heâll be safe, and contained.Â
When he wakes up in the hospital, Mr Newby reveals to Patty that he actually stole her as a baby (?) in an effort to revive his relationship with his wife by having another child to care for - but it didnât work, and his wife left him. He feels guilty about it, and wants to confess this to her after he almost died.
He tells her that he was attacked by a monster who made him relive his worst nightmares, and that âthe boyâ, Henry, actually fought back and saved him from death. He then draws the Mind Flayer on a piece of paper, hands it to his daughter, and tells her that this is what he saw.
After learning that Henry actually saved her father, Patty returns to his house to search for him, but itâs too late - Dr. Brenner has already taken him to the lab. However, she is able to communicate by calling out to him.
Henry contacts Patty through the void, where she is able to both speak and see him, despite him being at the lab. She tells him that she knows he is still a good person, and that he should return home.
âââ
Act 2.
On screen:
Chapter Two: Captain Midnight
So hereâs the thing - the play paints us a totally different picture than Season 4 did in regards to Henry/Vecna.Â
Henry was not inherently evil, like S4 suggested to many people - he was actually just a regular boy until âan incidentâ occurred when he was younger, which is what gave him powers and started his possession in the first place. The end of S4 makes us think that El sent Henry to the Upside Down, which is where he meets the shadow monster and morphs it into the Mind Flayer with his powers.
But that wasnât Henryâs first time there, nor was it the first time he saw the Mind Flayer. That was all just a REUNION.
Itâs revealed that Henry actually disappeared into another dimension (Dimension X/ Upside Down) for a period of 12 hours when he was just a kid. He got lost near some caves in the Nevada desert, and when he returned, he had "completely changed in personality".Â
He came back odd, ânot normalâ, and couldnât socialise well. He also returned with dangerous powers, which he violently inflicts on animals. The Mind Flayer had clearly started possessing him from that early point, way before he even came to Hawkins.Â
Letâs go back to the very beginning of the play - to the soldiers on the ship. It was Brennerâs father and his crew that were aboard this ship, the USS Eldridge, which had accidentally travelled into Dimension X/The Upside Down as a result of electromagnetic activity.Â
This is based on The Philadelphia Experiment, or Project Rainbow, said to have taken place in the Second World War. The programme had a double spread on this:Â
[Allegedly, wartime experiments caused the supernatural disappearance of a US naval ship⊠Project Rainbow was based on Einsteinâs research into unified field theory through which [he] hoped to create a single theoretical framework to encompass all fundamental forces, including electromagnetism and gravity.]Â
[Carl Allen claimed to have witnessed a strange event in October 1943 involving the naval destroyer escort USS Eldridge and scientists who were working on highly confidential technology which would make ships invisible to the enemy by using powerful electromagnetic fields to âbendâ light around them. According to Allen, they succeeded in doing just that. In fact, Allen said the ship was also briefly teleported 275 miles away to Norfolk, Virginia, before reappearing in Philadelphia. âŠItâs been suggested that the Eldridgeâs official logs could have been deliberately altered⊠with the whole of Project Rainbow moving beyond top secret clarification.]Â
-Catherine Jones
Brennerâs father is the only survivor of this terrifying event. After returning from Dimension X and taken to a hospital, injured and dying, we learn that his blood type is now âuniqueâ from any other human being. He won't survive a blood transfusion.
His ravings about Dimension X before his death haunted and inspired Brenner for the rest of his life. Brenner started an experiment focused on finding and travelling back to Dimension X; his ultimate goal was to "create a gate" to reach it again.
Brenner enacted these experiments in the Nevada desert, where one day, one of his agents ran away with some of Brennerâs equipment near some desert caves. The agent was never found, but a Captain Midnight spyglass was - which was the exact spot where Henry went missing in Dimension X as a little boy for 12 hours. Brenner therefore began searching for the mysterious Captain Midnight comic-book fan who went to Dimension X and returned, watching him and keeping an eye on him. This is what led him to Hawkins: following Henry.Â
Brenner tells us that Henryâs powers emerged after he visited Dimension X, and just like his father, his blood type is âuniqueâ. He collects several samples from him. He also tells Henry that his powers become stronger each time he kills, and thatâs why he gets so much satisfaction out of it. Brenner also tells Henry that he would get even stronger if he kills human beings, rather than animals.
During one scene, Brenner uses special equipment to see into and hear Henry's mind. He pushes Henry to the limit so he can hear and catch a glimpse of Dimension X. We hear noises similar to the Mind Flayer in Season 2 when Will goes into the Upside Down on Halloween night. The shape of the Mind Flayer appears on the screen (or was it the head of a Demogorgon? It was definitely something Upside-Downy), while Henry convulses. After this incident, Henry asks Brenner, âCan you take me back there?"Â
Brenner also introduces the idea of anger to fuel Henry's power. On several instances he riles Henry up to get him angry, insulting him - and the result is always violence. He succeeds in getting Henry to kill a mouse/rat, which explodes into a bloody mess inside its cage, and then tries to convince him to kill a criminal who has been transferred to the lab with an agreement to be killed (he has a date with the electric chair later that week regardless).Â
Henry refuses. Heâs been speaking to Patty in the void, who has convinced him that heâs good and that he should return home. Brenner is frustrated with this, and becomes sure that Henry has someone that is "holding him back". He vows to find and remove this obstacle. But after Henry leaves the lab, Brenner tells his agents to let him go. He cannot force Henry to kill. âIt has to be his choice."
Brenner is shown to have significant influence over Virginia. Heâs been providing her with medication/tranquilisers, and tells her that her son desperately needs his help. He encourages Virginia to tell him who the person Henry is attached to. She does. Brenner promises her that he will take Henry back into the lab and that he wonât leave again.Â
After Henry returns home, he reads his family's minds and learns that they are all afraid of him and unhappy with his return. He goes into his mother's memories and learns of the last interaction she had with Brenner, including that she wonders if he âmay never have been goodâ, and whether "this was who he was the whole time." He knows that she was willing to give him up to Brenner forever.Â
This is when the Creel murders happen, just like theyâre shown in Season 4. Virginia Creel and Alice Creel are both murdered at the dinner table - and we know Victor is going to be blamed for it.
Is this Henryâs own mind now, turned to darkness and hate, or is it the Mind Flayer intent on eliminating all of Henryâs attachments? A monster whoâs made a monster. I think itâs all left open to interpretation on purpose.Â
After the death of his mother and sister, Henry goes straight to Hawkins High to find Patty, hoping to reach her before Brenner does. While at the school, he runs into Joyce, who voices to him her suspicions surrounding the animal killings, and what happened to Mr Newby at the Creel House.
At first, Henry thinks Joyce has worked it out, and that she knows it was him all along. âI wish you hadnât done thatâŠâ he says, stepping closer. But Joyce clarifies just in time that she believes Henryâs father is the one who is dangerous, and that she believes heâs responsible for the terrible things that've happened in Hawkins recently. Maybe this is what gives Henry the idea to frame his father. Either way, he leaves Joyce alive.Â
Both Brenner and Henry find Patty on the stage rafters, up on a high catwalk, ready to perform her part in the play. Sheâs initially wearing a set of wings as a prop, which are attached to the rafter to be lowered. Henry unties her from these wings, pleading with her to run away with him. An argument ensues with Brenner, where he attempts to convince Henry that Patty is his weakness, and that he needs to kill her to let her go. Patty tells Henry not to listen to him.Â
During this argument, Henry loses control once more, and the Mind Flayer takes over. This results in Patty slow-motion falling from the rafters as the shape of the Mind Flayer overwhelms the stage. She hits the floor on her back, presumed dead.Â
(The stage effects for this particular scene were absolutely incredible, by the way.)
Henry is later seen back at the lab. Heâs fully subdued, confined to a straitjacket, mouth gagged, and sat in a wheelchair. Brenner says the implant (Soteria) is in, about to take effect.
If we believe what Season 4 showed us, the play skipped the part where Henry appeared dead alongside his mother and sister (just before Victor is then blamed and incarcerated at Pennhurst Asylum). So assuming that Brenner played a part in covering up Henryâs involvement in the Creel murders, Henry is presumed dead by the town at this point too. Unfortunately the play doesnât address this, as instead we see Henry run immediately from the dinner table murder scene, straight to Hawkins High to find Patty. Itâs a big inconsistency which I guess they want us to explain away with Henry being an âunreliable narratorâ in the show. I guess he gave Nancy the abridged version of what happened!
Anyway, it appears that Henry later finds Patty in the void, despite Brenner telling him that he killed her. It seems she has successfully left Hawkins and found her mother in Las Vegas, just as she always dreamed of doing. She uses a walking stick, but otherwise appears alive and well.Â
We hear and see static as Henry watches the scene unfold, and Patty glances over her shoulder, like she senses him. But then she turns her back and walks into the distance with her mother.Â
An alternative take that I heard from someone, was that perhaps Patty is truthfully still seriously injured and is actually in a coma (similar to Max). They thought that maybe the final scene of Patty with her mother was actually just something that Henry was creating for her in her mind, as a sort of last semblance of goodness and love. I donât think thatâs what was intended, but it was an interesting take that I wanted to include!Â
As the show nears its end, weâre presented with a series of newspaper articles relaying the tragic Creel Murders in Hawkins (possibly the same ones that Nancy and Robin find in Season 4). The Creel family all dead, Victor is blamed and sent to the asylum. The empty Creel House remains, a reminder of the horrors. It then shifts back to Hawkins lab, who are now recruiting pregnant women for experimentation.Â
Brenner introduces a pregnant woman to Henry (who is still bound to a chair and fully subdued) and explains to him that the "blood transfusion" finally worked on a subject. He points to the woman's belly and remarks, âOne, meet Two!"
âYou are as much a father to them as I am,â Brenner says at one point. Then, âCome⊠meet your brothers and sisters.â Even though we know Henry is not in any way related to the lab kids, they definitely played into the father/guardian/creator metaphor in the play. If not family by blood, then by circumstance.Â
We see photos of the babies created in the lab, with their numbers underneath. We can recognise Eight as young Kali. Eventually we get to Ten, at which point the stage focuses on a now older Henry, wearing his recognisable Season 4 orderly outfit. He kneels beside a child with buzzed hair.Â
"Hello, Eleven. Come with me.â He takes her by the hand, and they walk into the distance together.Â
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Some final thoughts:
Because of the incident with Patty during Joyce's play, we can infer that's why she is unsuccessful in her goal to impress the university, and remains stuck in Hawkins - just like Lonnie said she would.
Lonnie is awful, and Iâm in two minds about how heâs handled in the play. They did a good job to show heâs always been a douchebag, and unlike what Iâve seen some people say, I actually think it was horribly believable that Joyce (who they establish likes 'bad boys') ends up going back to him and having kids with him. We know from Season 1 that thereâs emotional abuse with Joyce and Lonnie, and to me, it makes horrible, horrible sense that it all ends up the way it does. Iâm just not sure how I feel about Lonnie being used as any kind of comedic effect in the play (he makes a brief reappearance at the police station, where heâs been lying drunkenly handcuffed on some chairs the whole time during a scene... âIt wasnât me! I didnât do it!" he says, or something to that effect). I feel like using him in that way diminishes how truly awful he is as a character. Maybe Iâm just being too sensitive, but Iâd much rather they had kept all the laughs and jokes for the other characters, and treated Lonnie completely seriously the whole way through. I donât want to see him in any way âlikeableâ or ârelatableâ or âfunnyâ, you know? Not even for cheap audience laughs. This is a guy who called his own kid son a f*g. Let's treat that with the gravity and solemnity it deserves, please.
Louis McCartney and Ella Karuna Williams as Henry Creel and Patty were great, and Isabella Pappas as Joyce was amazing. Dr Brenner was nicely emulated by Patrick Vaill (I personally think he was one of the most believable characters from stage to show). The best performance of all though was Christopher Buckley as Bob. Like, damn, give that kid all the awards! He was so believable as a young Bob, I actually forgot it wasnât somehow a young Sean Astin on stage. *chefâs kiss*
As previously mentioned, all the parents of the kids are present in the play (and already coupled up). None of these characters are particularly fleshed out, and I think theyâre mainly just there as fun âEaster Eggsâ to connect it with the show. E.g having Claudia own another cat that gets killed, seeing Ted Wheeler ironically as some kind of jock god who gets all the ladies (and cheats on Karen with, by the way!), Joyce holding an axe prop near the end mid-rant (âWhy am I holding this??â) and Hopper making a remark about breaking his own foot (which he does in Season 4).Â
They definitely seemed to be going back on the whole âit was Henry/Vecna the whole timeâ thing from Season 4: the Mind Flayer has been pulling the strings from way before El sent Henry to Dimension X/Upside Down. We even see the Mind Flayer in the shape of a giant eldritch spider during the play, way before Henry appears to âshapeâ it in Season 4. However, I think itâs also possible that Henry DID actually manage to take control of the Mind Flayer the second time he arrived in Dimension X (as we see at the end of S4). At that point, heâs killed all the lab kids and staff at Hawkins Lab, so he will be much more powerful now compared to the Henry from the play. By now heâs completely embraced the Mind Flayerâs philosophy, and is acting in its stead entirely on his own volition. Honestly? I think theyâre going to leave it ambiguous on purpose. I think thatâs why the play is technically canon, but totally not necessary before seeing Season 5. I think Henry and the Mindflayer are 'one' (lol) at this point - I think thatâs what Vecna technically is. Heâs like an amalgamation of this terrifying eldritch being that we can never begin to understand, but at the same time also something that is still deeply, deeply human.
The Henry side of him seems to be lost, but in a way Brenner was right - his feelings for Patty, whether âPuppy Loveâ or real - was his one redeeming weakness in his early teen years. Judging from the play, I think itâs possible we might see a tragic sort of redemption moment in S5 (which I personally have mixed feelings about). But I do believe the play is supposed to be entirely separate, and that itâs possible Patty will continue not to be mentioned or relevant in the show (I hope Iâm wrong). I just canât help but be cautious in assuming the Mind Flayer is still the one in control after what they set up at the end of Season 4 (especially with Will saying, âitâs weird to know who it was this whole timeâ re: his own kidnapping and possession). I think Henry has become his darkest self as Vecna.
Speaking of Will⊠there were noticeably a LOT of parallels with him in Henry. Henry wears pretty much exactly Willâs outfit from Season 4, yellow tones with beige and brown. Meanwhile Patty wears a blue cardigan and a blue dress - at least in Act 1. Iâm not hugely into the blue-and-yellow thing in a serious way, but even I noticed there were blue and yellow motifs for Henry and Patty. She wears a bright yellow top with her blue cardigan at one point too. I think there was definitely a mixture of both Will and El in Henryâs character.
Meanwhile Patty had noticeable similarities to Mike. Sheâs rebellious, outspoken, loves comic books, and worships superheroes.
Seeing the play hasnât impacted my beliefs or hopes for Byler in any way. I think there are potentially good things to be taken from the writing, and potentially bad things too. My current confidence has neither been raised nor lowered, but what I will say is that itâs undeniable that the Henry x Patty relationship mirrors both Mileven and Byler, but especially Mileven. Hentty is obviously a star-crossed tragedy, deliberately set up like Romeo and Juliet, which we know is NEVER a good thing. I do find it interesting that their love confessions were an exchange, unlike Mikeâs monologue. Patty is the one âpresentâ, whilst Henry is the one trapped in the void with his eyes closed/blindfold on. Itâs a high stakes moment. Patty tells Henry in desperation that she loves him, but she follows this up by pleading with him to say it back. I didnât see anyone else talking about this, but it really stood out to me.
The playâs themes and messages still reflected what I believe the show to be about: rejecting forced conformity (it dealt with peopleâs ideas about what it means to be ânormalâ to fit in, about sex not being taboo, harmful black and white morality, and the damage that can occur from enforcing religious dogma)... and of course, like Joyce said, that love will ultimately conquer fear.
Over and out!
[This kind of introspection throws up unsettling and complex ideas about the nature of human morality. What does it mean to be human? Who gets to decide who is âotherâ? How do we treat those who are different from us? These are huge issues, and far too esoteric for most of us to deal with in abstract. So the way we choose to explore them is in stories.]
- Michael Davies
toxic codependent familial dynamics this. toxic codependent romances that. what about toxic codependent coworkers. i canât do my job without this guy here or iâll kill myself.
me, internally: no im fucking not, because william shatner and leonard nimoy knew they were playing lovers but werenât allowed to kiss, and left lots of subliminal messages in star trek: the original series, subsquently creating the first slash pairing for which was written fan fiction in the early 70s. shatner also said while filming âspock itâs you, itâs always been you. please say you love me too,â tho it got cut. gene roddenberry also knew what he was doing with kirk and spock and coined the word tâhyâla in a fucking footnote in TMP novelisation in 1979. tâhyâla means friend, brother, lover and is the word spock uses to think of jim so yeah, they were lovers. moreover always in TMP novelisation gene confirms spock and kirk were bonded by writing that spock couldnât go through kolinahr bc he hears jim thinking about needing him from fucking earth i am so doneÂ
listen, as a fandom we've decided that Steve's favorite band is Tears for Fears, but I also need us to collectively consider Steve Harrington and Bruce Springsteen and also specifically Born in the USA. it came out in 1984, right when things started to go to shit for Steve. it's all about disillusionment with the American Dream and the government and the entire concept of authority, and also about masculinity and what that means, and about being downtrodden and not getting what you were promised, and also about desire (for sex, for love, for getting out of your hometown, for going back to your roots, for something more). it's pop rock but it's not; the sound is all good old fashioned mainstream rock 'n' roll but the message is about post-Vietnam America and the feeling that you're being tied down by the American flag. you can't tell me that Steve didn't find himself in that album as he fell from grace and realized there were things bigger and scarier than anything at Hawkins High. he hears himself in Born in the USA and Dancing in the Dark and I'm Going Down and No Surrender and Glory Days; he sees himself on that cover with the blue jeans and the white tee and the baseball cap in the back pocket with that casual, confident tilt of the hips. Born in the USA plays on the radio but it feels like Steve's album, like Springsteen wrote it just for him, because who understands Steve, the fallen king of Hawkins High, the boy with the nail-ridden baseball, bat but the boy from Jersey with a guitar and the desire to get the hell out of where he is?
tags from @kkpwnall Consider too that Bruce Springsteen kissed Clarence Clemons on stage repeatedlywhen such a thing was absolutely fucking SCANDALOUS.
Please imagine baby bisexual Steve going to a Springsteen show and seeing that after months of listening to Born in the USA on repeat.
yes yes thank you for these additions @kkpwnall @eddiemunsonsmiddlefingers !!
more photos of Bruce and Clarence kissing (from this twitter thread), because theyâre lovely:
the top one is probably from the Born in the Usa tour in 1984-1985, and thatâs what I like to imagine baby bi Steve would have seen. he mightâve gone to the Indianapolis dates in january of â85 and there he wouldâve seen two men kissing onstage. two men who, even years later, described in no uncertain terms how much they love and admiration they shared for each other (Springsteen said Clemonsâ death in 2011 was like âlosing the rainâ).
Steveâs his rock idol, the guy who filled his speakers during the lonely months of â84, kissed a guy onstage, repeatedly, at concert after concert, and not as a gimmick or to get a laughâjust because they loved each other so they kissed about it. thatâs gotta cause some kind of shift in him.
also, just for reference, this is what springsteen looked like on the born in the usa tour:
who wouldnât leave that show with some kind of revelation?
exactly!! born in the usa, and bruce and clarence cannot be understated. thank you both for understanding what i was saying and adding this context and photos!!