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The Many Horror References Lurking in ‘Stranger Things 5’ Volume I [Spoilers]

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Stranger Things 5 Horror References
STRANGER THINGS: SEASON 5. Cr. COURTESY OF NETFLIX © 2025

WARNING: The following contains major spoilers for Stranger Things 5: Volume I.

Stranger Things has always existed as a child of two worlds. Netflix’s nostalgic adventure series effortlessly straddles genre lines while referencing beloved sci-fi, horror, and fantasy texts. Emerging from a deft blend of 80s adventure films and vintage Stephen King novels, each installment has grown steadily darker and more horrific. Though season 5 nominally references lighter titles like Madeleine L’Engle’s beloved YA novel A Wrinkle in Time and Robert Zemeckis’ iconic Back to the Future, showrunners Matt and Ross Duffer slyly nod to classic horror throughout the first installment of their final season.

We return to a Hawkins much different than the one we left in the final moments of season 4. Eighteen months after fiery fissures bisected the town, citizens live under strict quarantine supervised by the US Army. Only those carrying needed supplies are allowed in and out of the heavily fortified city, yet residents are expected to continue life as if nothing has changed. Key to this mental trick is an indie radio station called The Squawk. Robin (Maya Hawke) has become a popular DJ and spends her days spinning records while promoting compliance with quarantine protocols. We reunite with the charismatic teen on her 500th broadcast, but quickly learn that the show contains coded notes to her fellow resistance fighters.

STRANGER THINGS: SEASON 5. (L to R) Maya Hawke as Robin Buckley and Joe Keery as Steve Harrington in Stranger Things: Season 5. Cr. COURTESY OF NETFLIX © 2025

These personalized messages nod to radio host Stevie Wayne, played by genre darling Adrienne Barbeau. John Carpenter’s atmospheric 1980 film The Fog sees her communicate with the residents of Antonio Bay as they’re invaded by the vengeful spirits of shipwrecked sailors.

This reference may be a bit obscure, but season 5 features the introduction of another beloved figure in the horror world. Leading the military in a relentless search for the Upside Down is cutthroat General Dr. Kay, played by the incomparable Linda Hamilton. First seen in soaps and TV dramas, Hamilton gave a breakthrough performance in Fritz Kiersch’s 1984 adaptation of the Stephen King short story “Children of the Corn.” In October of the same year, she would make waves as resourceful waitress Sarah Connor in James Cameron‘s sci-fi horror classic The Terminator. When a time-travelling soldier reveals that she will give birth to a military leader credited with saving humanity, Sarah finds herself hunted by a cybernetic assassin programmed to ensure her death. 

But Dr. Kay feels more indebted to the Sarah we see in Cameron’s explosive sequel, Terminator 2: Judgment Day. Having abandoned any hope for a normal life, Sarah has immersed herself in the culture of combat. Strong and militant, this fierce mother would protect her son at any cost while raising him to be a formidable leader. Though their tactics may be similar, Dr. Kay’s mission runs contrary to Sarah’s. Whereas the battleworn mother risks her life for her child, Dr. Kay seeks to imprison Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown) alongside her sister Kali/Eight (Linnea Berthelsen), possibly to expand the horrific experiments of Hawkins Lab.

STRANGER THINGS: SEASON 5. Linda Hamilton as Dr. Kay in Stranger Things: Season 5. Cr. COURTESY OF NETFLIX © 2025

Other visual references to Cameron’s legendary sequel include the use of a low-fi coffee vending machine and grainy security camera photos used to locate Eleven on the streets of Hawkins. Dr. Kay is shown covert images of the psychic teen similar to those identifying the Terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger), eleven years after destroying a heavily fortified police station.

Dr. Kay may be this season’s main human antagonist, but she’s far from the only maternal warrior featured in this initial batch of episodes. When a Demogorgon invades her home, Karen Wheeler (Cara Buono) takes desperate measures to protect her youngest daughter, Holly (Evil Dead Rise‘s Nell Fisher). At first, she cradles her child under the surface of a bubble bath as the monster creeps through her ruined bathroom before making a slippery break for the front door. Confronted with the petal-faced nightmare, she smashes a nearby wine bottle and wields it as a weapon, commanding the Demogorgon to stay away from her daughter.

STRANGER THINGS: SEASON 5. Cr. COURTESY OF NETFLIX © 2025

Joyce Byers (Winona Ryder) has a similar moment when she uses an ax to defend her son — in addition to Robin and another Hawkins child — from the interdimensional creature. These empowering moments bring to mind one of feminist horror’s pivotal scenes. Cameron’s bombastic sequel Aliens concludes with Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) donning a skeletal loader and ordering the Alien Queen to “get away” from her own adopted daughter, “Newt” (Carrie Henn).

Nodding to another iconic franchise, guest director Frank Darabont — best known in genre circles for a trilogy of Stephen King adaptations — makes a satisfying visual reference in “Chapter Three: The Turnbow Trap.” Determined to track the Demogorgon, the Party creates an elaborate plan similar to the one Nancy (Natalia Dyer) and Jonathan (Charlie Heaton) use to subdue the mysterious entity in the thrilling finale of season 1. Part of this complex contraption involves cutting a hole in the living room floor of a local real estate titan’s home, a daunting task for any tool.

Stranger Things 5 runtimes

STRANGER THINGS: SEASON 5. (L to R) Finn Wolfhard as Mike Wheeler, Caleb McLaughlin as Lucas Sinclair, Natalia Dyer as Nancy Wheeler, Joe Keery as Steve Harrington, Charlie Heaton as Jonathan Byers, and Gaten Matarazzo as Dustin Henderson in STRANGER THINGS: SEASON 5. Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2025

Searching the family’s backyard shed, Steve (Joe Keery) rejects an ax and smiles at a red chainsaw perched on the shelf. While most appearances of this singular weapon bring to mind Tobe Hooper‘s 1974 masterpiece The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, Darabont’s inclusion nods to Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead II. Forced to battle the sinister Deadites, Ash (Bruce Campbell) finds the powerful weapon and uses it to sever his own possessed hand. He will later attach it to the stump of his arm before uttering, “groovy” with a confident smile. Another charismatic hero embarking on a life-or-death battle, one can almost hear Steve channeling Ash’s iconic catchphrase as he revs the chainsaw and gets to work. 

When Vecna (Jamie Campbell Bower) was first introduced in season 4, his multi-faceted form of attack — exacerbating the nightmares of his traumatized victims — felt pulled from the playbook of A Nightmare on Elm Street. While these connections remain strong, season 5 alludes to another slasher villain. Episode 2 concludes with The Chordettes’ “Mr. Sandman,” prominently featured in Carpenter’s Halloween II and later in the 1998 legacy sequel Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later. Likely referencing his victims’ dream states, this inclusion amplifies the monster’s unkillable nature while winking at the second installment of his story. 

STRANGER THINGS: SEASON 5. Nell Fisher as Holly Wheeler in Stranger Things: Season 5. Cr. COURTESY OF NETFLIX © 2025

Despite these overt references, season 5 introduces us to an altogether different Vecna. Holly and her classmates are not stalked by a horrific beast roaming a blood-red lair, but a dapper gentleman in a tweed suit and hat, complete with an old-fashioned pocket watch. Currently reading A Wrinkle in Time, Holly calls Henry (Bower) “Mr. Whatsit” after the novel’s shapeshifting guide, but audiences know that danger lurks behind his friendly smile. In an interview with Ash Crossen for Screen Rant, Bower notes taking inspiration from a much darker source: Gregory Hoblit’s 1996 shocker Primal Fear. Part courtroom drama, part murder mystery, this stunning film features a jaw-dropping twist in its final moments. We won’t spoil the ending here, but anyone familiar with Edward Norton’s astonishing performance will understand why the children are inclined to see Henry as a savior. 

For the more monstrous side of this duplicitous character, Bower drew from the lush world of Clive Barker. More commonly known as Pinhead (Doug Bradley), the Hell Priest first appears in Barker’s 1986 novella The Hellbound Heart, leading a group of interdimensional cenobites drawn to our reality with the completion of an elaborate puzzle box. Bower pulls from Bradley’s legendary performance, with a commanding, yet dignified voice as he drifts through the carnage his rule has caused. Vecna’s tentacled body and malleable hands nod to the painful body modification central to the cenobite’s image. His ethereal presence is strangely alluring even when conjuring certain death.

With four episodes left in the season, we’re likely to see these two villainous personas merge as Vecna makes his final assault on Hawkins. 

Stranger Things 5 Volume I is now streaming. Volume II releases three on December 25, and the series finale on December 31.

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Editorials

The Mark of the Beast: The Lasting Impact of ‘The Omen’ at 50

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The Omen at 50

Of the three films that make up the Diabolical Trinity of classic religious horror films—Rosemary’s Baby (1968), The Exorcist (1973), and The Omen (1976)—The Omen is the most purely entertaining.

While Rosemary’s Baby digs into the societal shifts of the 60s and The Exorcist explores spiritual tensions between faith and doubt in an ever-shifting world, The Omen seems most interested in just telling a thrilling story. It achieves this by blending two major trends of the 1970s, the devil movie and the paranoid thriller, into one crackling adventure yarn. In the process, The Omen has sparked fear and curiosity about what could happen in theend timesif such events are to occur.

After seeing The Exorcist, producer Harvey Bernhard contacted writer David Seltzer and said something along the lines of,Hey, write me one of those.Seltzer, having never read the Bible, thought it would be an interesting challenge, so, according to various interviews, he read the Bible and several commentaries in search of a story. Then he stumbled upon a passage in the book of Revelation, the image of a great Beast rising out of the sea, that sparked his imagination. In the commentaries, he found that the sea represented politics in some interpretations of the text, and he began building his story on that foundation.

Seltzer has told this story often, and I am inclined to believe him. However, from there, much of the theological-sounding lore of The Omen was created purely by Seltzer. Many of the ideas surrounding The Antichrist in the film appear to be drawn much more from the pop-eschatology sensation of the 1970s, The Late Great Planet Earth by Hal Lindsay, than any Biblical source.

Lindsay’s book was the bestselling nonfiction book of the 1970s and re-popularized views of thelast daysthat had been dying along with fundamentalism for decades, namely Dispensationalism, Millennialism, and the Pre-Tribulation Rapture. In dispensationalism, history is broken into several epochs of time (or dispensations) that culminate in the return of Christ and his thousand-year (millennial) reign.

Before this return, a seven-year Tribulation will occur in which the Antichrist comes to power and persecutes all who oppose him, culminating in a battle between the forces of good and evil at the valley of Megiddo, usually called Armageddon. Of course, in this worldview, the true believers in Jesus will be lifted out, or raptured, before all this takes place. Since the publication and popularity of The Late Great Planet Earth, this has been the prominent belief in Evangelical and Fundamentalist Christian circles, though Roman Catholic, Orthodox, and mainline Protestant denominations largely reject it.

Lindsay also did something unique that had not been the case even in dispensationalist circles before him—he posited that the creation of the modern state of Israel in 1948 started the countdown to Armageddon. Fans of the film will immediately realize where Seltzer ran with this idea in the first line of the poem created for the movie:When the Jews return to Zion…

Damien Thorn and the Creation of Horror’s “Innocent Villain”

The Omen

Seltzer’s next inspiration focused on the idea of the Antichrist as a child, what he would call the film’sinnocent villain.In watching The Omen, it is readily apparent that Damien Thorn (Harvey Stephens) does not really do anything evil beyond a bit of normal kid mischief. Even the moment in which Damien knocks Kathy Thorn (Lee Remick) over a second-floor railing can be read as an accident orchestrated by Damien’s diabolically connected nanny, Mrs. Baylock (Billie Whitelaw). The film takes this idea of the innocent villain a step further by casting Gregory Peck, best known for playing arguably the greatest father in film history, Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird (1962), as Damien’s earthly father, an element that greatly satisfied Seltzer.

The New Testament itself says very little about the Antichrist and certainly nothing about his childhood. In fact, the word antichrist is used twice (1 John 2:18 and 2 John 7 for the curious) and refers to groups of people, not a particular person. There is also a passage in 2 Thessalonians 2:1-12 in which the writer (usually attributed to Paul) discussesThe Man of Lawlessnesswho willexalt himself over everything that is called Godandproclaim himself to be God.

Then there is the Beast of Revelation chapter 13 withseven heads and ten hornsthat Seltzer latched onto, which has been interpreted in a multitude of ways over the centuries. Powerful people throughout history, from Charlemagne, various Popes during the Protestant Reformation era, Napoleon and Hitler, to modern politicians, including Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, Vladimir Putin, Barack Obama, and Donald Trump, have all had the label placed on them by various circles. Even religious leaders like Billy Graham have not escaped being called the Antichrist.

Lindsay and modern dispensationalists are certain the Antichrist will be a 21st-century individual as they are equally certain that the Rapture, Tribulation, and return of Christ are imminent, likely within their lifetime. Many scholars and theologians, however, interpret these passages as symbolic representations of the Roman Empire and the first-century Caesars who persecuted, tortured, and murdered Christians and Jews who refused to submit to Imperial rule and worship them as gods. For example, that the Beast from the sea in Revelation has seven heads is symbolic of the famous seven mountains of Rome, with the 10 horns referring to rulers and magistrates of the Empire.

But this is all really of no matter to Seltzer and the story of The Omen. Instead of being concerned with any historical or theological accuracy, he instead built his own lore, which sends Robert Thorn and photographer Keith Jennings (David Warner) on a globetrotting investigation into the nature of the Antichrist and how to stop him. Some of this lore includes the child being born of a jackal, the reaction of animals, the protective cult that arises around Damien, the daggers of Megiddo, and maybe most interesting of all, the peculiar flaws in Jennings’s photographs that presage the ways certain individuals will die.

All these aspects are where the paranoid thrillers come in, as films like Blow Up (1966), Z (1969), The Conversation (1974), The Parallax View (1974), 3 Days of the Condor (1975), and All the President’s Men (1976) were all the rage at the time. Especially in the wake of the Watergate scandal, the idea of journalists (like Jennings) as ordinary heroes who could bring down the powerful, nefarious forces in the world was exactly what audiences craved. And what greater hidden evil force was there than the Devil? This is also why the device of the daggers of Megiddo is so important to a movie like this. If Damien is indeed the Antichrist, there must be a way to stop him, though in the Biblical text, the only power capable of destroying the Devil is God Himself.

The Mark of the Beast, 666, and the Film’s Most Famous Religious Symbolism

The piece of lore created for the movie with the most solid Biblical grounding is the Mark of the Beast. Revelation describes a mark on the forehead or hand of those who worship the Beast and his image. Again, this is symbolic language differentiating those who belong to the power of the Roman Empire and those who belong to Christ, who have the Mark of the Lamb. In Seltzer’s hands, the mark is very literal, a birthmark that is borne by not only the Antichrist but all his followers, meaning they are marked from before birth as belonging to Satan, and there is no escaping it. This is all rather distressing to the priest Father Brennan (Patrick Troughton), who betrays his mark by warning Thorn about Damien and pays the price by memorably being impaled by a spire that falls from a church steeple after being struck by lightning.

Why is the mark three sixes? Again, this is drawn from a passage in Revelation that states that the Beast can be identified by calculating his number. In Biblical scholarship, this is believed to be the sum of the name of a man transferred into Hebrew numerology, a practice in which each Hebrew letter also represents a number. Using this method, the number of the name Caesar Nero, which many believe to be the most logical choice, is six hundred sixty-six. In the film and elsewhere, this number is changed to three individual sixes. According to the film, this represents the Diabolical Trinity (a designation also unique to the film) made up of Satan, the Antichrist, and the False Prophet. That Damien carries this unique birthmark under his hair convinces Robert that the child is the Antichrist, and it’s up to him to destroy him.

Part of what makes The Omen great is its ambiguity. Damien could be the Antichrist, or he could be at the center of a series of coincidences. Director Richard Donner stated in interviews that he believed Robert Thorn had gone insane by the end of the film, which, to Donner, is the only explanation for why Thorn would attempt to kill an innocent child. However, that enigmatic smile in the final shot suggests that Damien does embody a spirit of great evil. The sequels, however, all but erase this ambiguity.

In audiences, The Omen sparked a renewed interest in the concept of the Antichrist and the dispensationalist interpretation of the end times that continues to echo throughout the last five decades. Around the time of the film’s release, even Elvis Presley was photographed brandishing a paperback copy of Seltzer’s novelization. Dispensationalist authors like Hal Lindsay, Tim LaHaye, and John Hagee have made millions publishing books and giving lectures about the Antichrist and the end of the world.

The Legacy of The Omen, 50 Years Later

Though A Thief in the Night (1972) preceded The Omen in initial release, it gained quite a resurgence (along with the ability to create three sequels) in the wake of the popularity of The Omen and went on to scar the psyches of Evangelical children for decades. Hal Lindsay was also able to release a film version of The Late Great Planet Earth in 1978, complete with narration and a brief onscreen appearance from Orson Welles.

In the 1990s, the Left Behind series became a cultural phenomenon, spawning twelve books in the core series, a YA spinoff series, video games, and a movie series (2000-2005) starring Kirk Cameron. A bigger studio adaptation of the first book was released in 2014, starring Nicolas Cage. 20th Century Fox and The Omen got in on the renewedend-of-the-worldvigor by releasing a remake of the original film on June 6, 2006. The franchise was revived once again in 2024 with The First Omen, which explores ideas of the Antichrist and the motivations of those in power in our current religious, social, and political context.

But despite all the sequels, spinoffs, rip-offs, remakes, andend timesmoney grabs of the last 50 years, the original version of The Omen remains untouchable. Its greatest strength is that it seeks, first and foremost, to entertain. And it does so admirably.

After half a century, its influence can be felt in horror, the culture at large, and even in various faith circles. It is a testament to the power of story and film that, consciously or unconsciously, fans of The Omen and those who have never seen it alike are, to this very day, marked by the Beast.

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