14 "Stranger Things 4" Behind-The-Scenes Facts You Might Not Know, But Should
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Warning: Spoilers (and demogorgons) ahead! Seriously, if you haven't watched the entire season (or the seven episodes that have been released so far), bookmark this for later.
1.Noah Schnapp told Insider that he's asked the Duffer Brothers to change his character Will's bowl cut, but alas, Will can't get a break, from either the Upside Down or the Stranger Things hair and makeup department.
Schnapp said, "I've talked to them so many times like, 'Hey, are we thinking about a new cut for Will?' There's one more season left, but they're pretty loyal to that cut. I think it is a true kind of '80s classic haircut. So I don't think we're gonna lose it anytime soon."
2.In an "Interview from the Hair Chair," Millie Bobby Brown said that it takes about an hour to apply Eleven's shaved head wig. (Back in Season 1, her head was shaved for real, but not this time around.) Her makeup is much simpler; Brown said that at most, she's only wearing "a bit of mascara and some blush."
3.OK, one last hair one: One of the new additions to the cast this season is Dungeons & Dragons enthusiast and potential Satanic panic scapegoat Eddie Munson, played by Joe Quinn.
Quinn told Entertainment Weekly that pulling off Eddie's '80s look, which he described as "very David Bowie in Labyrinth," involved two weeks of wig fittings. The final product was effective, but itchy.
He explained, "Unfortunately, I'm not David Bowie, so I didn't think that I could pull that off. I wanted something that was normal, of this world, more like a mullet. But we compromised. I mean, it's still objectively ridiculous, but it serves the character really well. It's very useful as an actor to put something on and instantly you feel like you're looking at a different person."
4.Murray, aka everyone's favorite conspiracy theorist (who just so happens to be on the money with 99% of his conspiracies), spends the first part of Season 4 talking up his karate abilities. Joyce is understandably concerned when he reveals at a key moment that those karate abilities have only been tested in sparring matches against teenagers, but Murray comes through and emerges victorious.
That he wins is a relief to Joyce and Murray both, and probably to Murray's actor Brett Gelman, too, since Gelman spent three months training with karate instructors. He told GQ, "I took it very seriously. Murray is a black belt. And so I felt like, if he’s a black belt then I need to make that look as authentic as possible. And they already were setting me up with a karate trainer. I think that I trained more and requested to train more than they had originally anticipated that I’d want to. For three months — two months before the shutdown and then a month leading up to shooting — I was with these amazing trainers, Simon Rhee and Phillip Rhee, who are Taekwondo masters."
Gelman called the experience of training "healing," since he wasn't particularly athletic as a child. He explained, "Feeling that I can pick these things [karate and speaking Russian] up so quickly at 45 years old feels like oh, wow, I am in my prime."
5.Sadie Sink told the LA Times that while filming, she journaled in character as Max "for a few minutes every night." She explained that this exercise is "a common thing you do in theater school growing up.”
6.In one of the season's most memorable moments, Max breaks free of Vecna's death grip through the power of hearing her favorite song: Kate Bush's "Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)." According to People, the song reached number one on iTunes by the Monday following the season's release.
7.At the Season 4 premiere, Joe Keery (Steve Harrington) said that co-star Gaten Matarazzo (Dustin Henderson) is "like the 60-year-old uncle that I never had." He added that "bickering with Gaten" onscreen "feels very natural" to their real-life dynamic.
When asked about the uncle comment in an interview with Esquire, Matarazzo responded, "Yeah, that sounds about right. I think it flip-flops. I feel like there are certain days in which I'm just the giggly little brother, and then there are others where I feel like I'm the child wrangler."
8.According to a profile in the New York Times, the Duffer Brothers write in the same Google Doc while "facing each other." Close creative collaboration aside, Matt Duffer said that going on a writing retreat would be their limit, joking that it "could end in a double murder — or just a murder."
9.One of the most popular fan theories amongst Stranger Things viewers is that Will, who has struggled with his friends' focus on girls and dating as they've gotten older, is gay, asexual, or otherwise queer. Noah Schnapp told Variety that he appreciates the ambiguity of Will's portrayal, because it leaves room for the audience to interpret the character themselves.
Schnapp said, "I feel like they never really address it or blatantly say how Will is. I think that’s the beauty of it, that it’s just up to the audience’s interpretation, if it’s Will kind of just refusing to grow up and growing up slower than his friends, or if he is really gay.” Millie Bobby Brown added, "Can I just say, it’s 2022 and we don’t have to label things. I think what’s really nice about Will’s character is that he’s just a human being going through his own personal demons and issues. So many kids out there don’t know, and that’s OK. That’s OK to not know. And that’s OK not to label things."
Schnapp said that although people want to "put a label on [Will]," he's "just confused and growing up. And that’s what it is to be a kid.”
10.Dacre Montgomery, who played Max's cruel older brother Billy, appears for a brief cameo this season, in which the monstrous Vecna taunts Max (Sadie Sink) as Billy. Though the scene is emotionally intense, with the grieving Max quite literally coming face-to-face with her trauma, the two actors didn't film together. In fact, they shot the scene on two different continents, nearly a year apart.
Director Shawn Levy explained to Entertainment Weekly, "When I read that I got to bring back Billy, I was over the moon. But here's what's crazy: Because COVID scuttled all of our production plans in the midst of an already massively ambitious season, Dacre could not leave Australia to film his scene."
With "lockdowns and protocol updates and more lockdowns and more stringent border restrictions," Levy said that he ultimately decided to direct Montgomery remotely (over Zoom, no less). This was a year after Levy shot Sink's portion of the scene; Montgomery's performance was digitally merged with hers in a bit of pandemic-era movie magic.
Levy said that the scene was among "the biggest Rubik's Cube challenges of my directing career." On Instagram, Montgomery wrote, "Feeling extremely fortunate to have been able to shoot these scenes during the pandemic in my hometown, Perth (in Australia)."
Friends, this is where things get really spoiler-y, so I'll say it again: All Ye Who Enter Here Better Have Watched All Seven Episodes.
Netflix / Via giphy.com