Wales On Sunday

HELLO, STRANGER

AFTER A TWO-YEAR WAIT, NETFLIX HIT STRANGER THINGS IS BACK FOR A TERRIFYING FOURTH SEASON. STARS DAVID HARBOUR AND BRETT GELMAN TELL RACHAEL DAVIS WHAT WE CAN EXPECT

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RESIDENTS of the fictional town of Hawkins, Indiana often say that it is cursed.

It’s the kind of small, sleepy midwestern American town where nothing really happens – that is until 1983, when a gate to an alternate dimension is accidental­ly opened, unleashing supernatur­al terror onto the citizens.

In the fourth season of Netflix’s Stranger Things, Hawkins is yet again plagued by a terrifying supernatur­al entity from the dimension known as the Upside Down.

When the town is shaken by a horrific and gruesome attack, it is not long before the heroic gang of inquisitiv­e teenagers from previous seasons realise that it was not the work of a depraved human, but a creature from another world.

It is 1986 and the friends are separated for the first time. Joyce (Winona Ryder), Will (Noah Schnapp), Jonathan (Charlie Heaton) and Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown) have relocated to California; Steve (Joe Keery) and Robin (Maya Hawke) get jobs in a video rental store in Hawkins; Nancy (Natalia Dyer) is working on the high school paper while preparing to head off to college, and Dustin (Gaten Matarazzo), Lucas (Caleb McLaughlin), Mike (Finn Wolfhard) and Max (Sadie Sink) start Hawkins High School together.

High school is a rough time for many, and even kids who have fought off monsters from another dimension are not immune to the struggles it brings: bullying, sports cliques, popularity contests and adolescent identity battles.

On top of that, they are also still dealing with the fallout from the Battle of Starcourt [the season three finale, where the friends fought the Upside Down’s ruler, the Mind Flayer, at the local shopping mall] before setting out once again to solve a mystery that could finally put an end to the horrors of the alternate dimension for good.

Also having a dreadful time in the new run is former Hawkins’ police chief Jim Hopper, played by David Harbour. A post-credits scene at the end of season three hints that he might still be alive, despite being caught up in the explosive end of the Battle of Starcourt, and that he is locked up in a Russian prison. We meet him in Stranger Things 4 as he is being punched, kicked, tortured and tormented before being shipped off to a forced labour camp in the snowy wasteland of Kamchatka. “What’s special this season is that we get to see a very different guy than we’ve seen before,” says David, 47, who is married to British singer Lilly Allen. “We saw this cop father figure, and now he’s had a death and he’s being resurrecte­d as a prisoner who’s become this kind of brutal warrior to have to survive the frozen wasteland of Russia, the prison life he’s in. There’s also this tremendous guilt that he carries around that he’s going to have to purge.

“We’re going to see a very different guy this season, a man that’s truly broken and living in despair.”

Meanwhile Joyce receives a mysterious parcel from Russia which leads her to believe that Hopper might still be alive.

She immediatel­y calls in reinforcem­ents in the form of eccentric Murray, played by Brett Gelman, who became a righthand man in season three thanks to his fluency in Russian.

Murray is a central part of the narrative this season, the apex of a character arc that has seen him go from kooky comic relief to an integral pillar of support for Joyce.

“It’s amazing to be able to see how Murray has developed to be more of a part of everything,” Brett, 45, says.

“Every year my role has grown

and it’s such a tremendous honour for me – it’s so exciting to be more and more of a part of a show that I was a fan of.

“Even though he was smaller in the second season, I’m still thinking about the entire arc of what’s going on with him and where he’s coming from, and why he is the way that he is. That’s all being filtered through the comedy.”

Brett adds that working more closely this season with Winona, known for her roles in classic 1980s and 1990s films like Beetlejuic­e and Edward Scissorhan­ds, has been “insane” because, “I get to work with one of my heroes, one of the greatest movie stars of all time.

“She is somebody that I grew up learning from as a young person wanting to act profession­ally, somebody who I was in love with watching on the silver screen.

“She’s such a remarkable artist, such an amazing person.

“I love the idea of being in a comedy duo in something to begin with, but the fact that it’s Winona Ryder just makes it that much more heavenly,” he beams.

Similarly, Hopper’s character in season four is a far cry from the sofa-dwelling doughnut-eating cop fans know and love from earlier seasons. He has a number of exciting and physically demanding fight scenes and action moments, his bravery tested to the limit in the desolate Russian tundra.

“Up until last season, I’d done very little training,” says David about preparing for the role.

“I’m just a guy who, for most of my life, kind of knew how to throw a punch, but that’s about it.

“I’ve never really been a physical guy – I’ve always been like a dorky theatre kid, to be honest.

“We were in really cold environmen­ts, like 20 below, in Lithuania, in bare feet in the snow, and my body that was chilling out on a sofa in Hawkins eating chips is not the body that could do that.

“I had to train a lot, different weight training programmes and physical rehab with Pilates and stuff like that, and I did a lot of boxing.”

“I still don’t know how to use my legs in any meaningful­ly brutal way, but my fists are deadly weapons,” he adds with a grin.

Season four of Stranger Things is undoubtedl­y darker, more emotional, more psychologi­cally thrilling and more action-packed than any of its predecesso­rs, though it still retains its trademark comic relief to soften the horrifying blows.

It is also perhaps the most epic season of the show to date, as creators the Duffer Brothers engage in monumental cinematic shots which David says made the cast and crew “giggle on set about the big [Steven] Spielberg nature of what this show’s become”.

“Everything is amplified this season to the millionth degree,” Brett adds.

“I really love the way the Duffers balance everything in such a masterful way: they are able to balance several different genres at once and scare you, make you laugh, make you stress, have you at the edge of your seat, thrill you from one scene to the next.

“As an audience member, they treat you as a pinball of tone and genre.”

Stranger Things 4 Volume One comes to Netflix on Friday, May 27 with Volume Two following on Friday, July 1

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Winona Ryder as Joyce Byers and Brett Gelman as Murray Bauman
David Harbour as Jim Hopper
Winona Ryder as Joyce Byers and Brett Gelman as Murray Bauman David Harbour as Jim Hopper
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 ?? ?? Brett Gelman and co-star Millie Bobby Brown at the season four premiere in New York
Brett Gelman and co-star Millie Bobby Brown at the season four premiere in New York
 ?? ?? David and wife Lily Allen
David and wife Lily Allen
 ?? ?? (L-R) Eduardo Franco as Argyle, Charlie Heaton as Jonathan, Millie Bobby Brown as Eleven, Noah Schnapp as Will Byers and Finn Wolfhard as Mike Wheeler
(L-R) Eduardo Franco as Argyle, Charlie Heaton as Jonathan, Millie Bobby Brown as Eleven, Noah Schnapp as Will Byers and Finn Wolfhard as Mike Wheeler
 ?? ?? Steve (Joe Keery), Robin (Maya Hawke) and Max (Sadie Sink)
Steve (Joe Keery), Robin (Maya Hawke) and Max (Sadie Sink)
 ?? ?? Mike, Lucas (Caleb McLaughlin) and Dustin (Gaten Matarazzo)
Mike, Lucas (Caleb McLaughlin) and Dustin (Gaten Matarazzo)

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