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“Stranger Things 4” Volume 2 Review – Action-Heavy Fight Against Vecna Sets the Stage for Final Season

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Stranger Things animated

The first volume of “Stranger Things 4” ended on a bit of a cliffhanger, seven episodes deep into a super-sized nine-episode season. The characters remained splintered, this time on a global scale, but significant reveals behind the season’s big bad, Vecna (Jamie Campbell Bower), laid the groundwork for the final confrontation. Volume 2 may pick up immediately where the first left off, but, spread over two feature-length episodes, it takes a while to get to the final fight. While ambition and massive scale remain at the forefront of “Stranger Things 4,” Volume 2 continues its struggle against predictable storytelling.

The 90-minute penultimate episode devotes itself to setting the stage for the even more extended finale. It somehow moves the characters forward on the playing field while holding them in place. Jonathan (Charlie Heaton), Argyle (Eduardo Franco), Mike (Finn Wolfhard), and Will (Noah Schnapp) are on a quest to find Eleven (Millie Bobbie Brown). Hopper (David Harbour) has reunited with Joyce (Winona Ryder) at the Russian prison, which also happens to have a Demogorgon problem. Dustin (Gaten Matarazzo), Nancy (Natalia Dyer), Steve (Joe Keery), Robin (Maya Hawke), Eddie (Joseph Quinn), Max (Sadie Sink), Lucas (Caleb McLaughlin), and Erica (Priah Sinclair) remain at ground zero to Vecna’s apocalyptic plan.

STRANGER THINGS. (L to R) Tom Wlaschiha as Dmitrti, Brett Gelman as Murray Bauman, Winona Ryder as Joyce Byers, and David Harbour as Jim Hopper in STRANGER THINGS. Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2022

Various government factions or rogue citizens compound the Upside Down woes for every group spanning the globe. The more prominent the fight against Vecna becomes, the more these secondary antagonist subplots fade into the peripheral or disappear altogether. It’s one of the more glaring examples of how the sheer scope of the story and its ensemble cast is becoming more difficult to wrangle into cohesion. Components that foreshadowed a larger payoff go out with a whimper as the series’ familiar patterns emerge once more. It stretches some plot threads too thin. That means you’ll likely guess how certain arcs will conclude long before Volume 2 gets there.

While Volume 2 falls into more predictable territory, it does at least attempt to address the lack of stakes that pervaded Volume 1. The complicated plan to thwart Vecna doesn’t go off without a hitch. That’s expected. What isn’t expected is the way it creates ripple effects and repercussions. It leads to some poignant and heartfelt moments that effectively hit you in the feels, even the ones you saw coming.

STRANGER THINGS. (L to R) Sadie Sink as Max Mayfield and Caleb McLaughlin as Lucas Sinclair in STRANGER THINGS. Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2022

“Stranger Things 4” favors spectacle over finesse. Volume 2 boasts impressive set pieces, explosions, a ton of action, and a darker edge to the horror, at least where the adult storylines are concerned. Every character gets at least one hero moment, but the season belongs to Sink. Her arc and performance as Max, tortured in more ways than one, lends needed gravitas and depth. Matarazzo also stands out as the beating heart of the cast; the actor can boost or engage with any scene partner with earnestness and infectious affability.

It’s the cast’s emotional range and their characters’ extensive history that anchors a season so ambitious that many threads slip through its cracks. So many unaddressed questions remain by Volume 2’s end, only some by design. It presents a clear path forward for the final season and a sense of foreboding and fortitude. Volume 2 relies on the same battle structure from previous seasons, diminishing its impact. From a character standpoint, however, it’s impossible not to root for them as they’re put through the wringer, furthering their harsh transition into adulthood. That sums up “Stranger Things 4” overall; it’s a penultimate season for the grand finale, wrapped up in scale and spectacle.

“Stranger Things 4” Volume 2 is available now on Netflix.

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Co-Host of the Bloody Disgusting Podcast. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon and SeriesFest.

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Lifetime’s ‘The Manny’ Is a Fun, Silly Take on ‘The Stepfather’ [Review]

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You know that when prolific director Doug Campbell is involved in a thriller, it’s going to be a ridiculously good time. So although The Manny, written by screenwriters Tamar Halpern and Scotty Mullen, isn’t on the same level as this year’s She’s Obsessed with My Husband, it’s still got plenty to recommend.

Lani McCall (Joanne Jansen) is a food vlogger on the rise. She’s on the cusp of signing a major network contract, thanks to love interest Zack (Brendan Morgan), but her recent divorce from unreliable husband Darren (Jamaal Grant) has left her in a precarious child care situation.

Lani tends to rely on assistant/producer Mercedes (Hailey Summer), but it’s not a sustainable situation. What she really needs is a nanny for her son, Jaylen (Ashton Ayres); ideally as soon as possible.

A close up of Morgan (Michael Evans Behling)'s face

Enter Morgan (Michael Evans Behling), a hunky 23 year old who cooks, cleans, and dotes on Lani. He’s too good to be true, which – in Lifetime films – is code for “he’s a completely homicidal wacko.”

The joy of these thrillers isn’t piecing together who the villain is; that’s usually obvious from the opening scene (that applies here: The Manny opens with Morgan putting away notepads on his previous “families” and starting a fresh one with a picture of Lani and Jaylen on the cover).

Instead the fun comes from watching the ridiculous gaslighting the villains do before they get their inevitable comeuppance. And, in the case of The Manny, Halpern and Mullen understand that silly is often better than serious.

Which is why when Morgan begins disposing of Lani’s closest friends and confidants to secure his position in the household and her heart, his technique is hilariously unusual. For example, Lani’s sex-positive neighbor Shannon (Jenny Itwaru) is first painted as a gossip before Morgan poisons her smoothie with (get this) expired prosciutto in order to give her a stomach bug.

Morgan’s psychotic behavior quickly escalates to include identity theft, catfishing, and eventually murder, albeit even the latter action is sublimely silly. I can’t honestly say I’ve ever seen asphyxiation by Murphy bed in a thriller before, but I hope to again!

Morgan (Michael Evans Behling) shirtless doing yard work

Considering Morgan ingratiates himself into Lani’s life partially via cooking, it’s amusing how many of his violent acts involve kitchen items. Mercedes is removed temporarily from the equation when she breaks a leg falling down cooking oil-greased stairs and, in the kitchen-set climax, Morgan even threatens to tip a pot of boiling water on top of Jaylen’s head.

In different hands, this could be genuinely scary, but Campbell’s directorial approach tends to lean into camp territory. Halpern and Mullen’s screenplay adopts a similar approach, peppering Zack’s dialogue with affirmations of the Manny’s model good looks, including the observation that his “lips are distracting.” Even serious moments, such as when Morgan alleviates Lani’s stress by rubbing peppermint oil on her neck, is accompanied by the double entendre “Yeah, you are pretty tight.”

Evans Behling is having a great time as the perpetrator, striking the right balance between unhinged and doe-eyed innocent. Not unlike The Stepfather films, Morgan is basically a family annihilator in search of the perfect pair, though the traumatic origin of his obsession feels slightly at odds tonally with the goofiness of the rest of the plot.

As the gaslit protagonist, Jansen is saddled with the least interesting role, though Lani’s struggle to balance her career while dating and single parenting is relatable content. Secondary characters are enjoyable enough, particularly when they are given opportunities to be suspicious of Morgan.

At its core, The Manny is a silly and entertaining entry in Lifetime’s catalogue of thrillers. Any film that ends with a battle in the woods and features a ski pole as a weapon is alright by me.

The Manny premieres on Lifetime Thursday, May 9.

4 out of 5 skulls

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