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Duffer brothers unveil intentional ambiguity in Stranger Things finale
The Duffer brothers, creators of the hit series Stranger Things, have shared insights into the carefully crafted finale that wrapped up nine years of storytelling with a two-hour episode on New Year's Eve. In detailed interviews, Matt and Ross Duffer revealed that many emotional beats were plotted years in advance, deliberately steering clear of shocking twists akin to Game of Thrones' infamous Red Wedding.
They discussed leaving Eleven's fate open-ended after her apparent sacrifice in the Upside Down. The closing Dungeons & Dragons session in the Wheeler basement mirroring the pilot episode sees Mike offering an upbeat theory: Kali might have used her powers to conjure an illusion, allowing Eleven to slip away to a quiet town with waterfalls.
"There are two paths for Eleven one darker and more pessimistic, the other optimistic and hopeful," Matt Duffer told Netflix Tudum. "Mike embodies the group's optimism, and he chooses to believe it." Ross Duffer emphasized that Eleven's departure was non-negotiable for character growth and closing the Hawkins-Upside Down saga. "It felt poetic for the characters to cling to that hopeful ending, even if we don't confirm it definitively," he added.
This framing device had been in the works for years. As Mike shuts the basement door on his friends, it symbolizes leaving childhood behind, with Finn Wolfhard delivering a poignant mix of sorrow and bittersweet joy.
The brothers collaborated closely with the cast on individual arcs: Mike turns to writing, Dustin graduates top of his class and heads to college while staying tight with Steve, Max and Lucas finally catch their long-delayed movie date watching Ghost, Nancy joins a Boston newspaper after ditching Emerson College, Jonathan studies film at NYU, Robin attends Smith College, and Steve coaches Little League.
Joyce accepts Hopper's proposal at Enzo's, planning a move to Montauk a nod to the show's original setting. "David Harbour loved the idea of a Dickensian ending for them," Matt noted.
Addressing fan fears of major deaths, Matt assured The Hollywood Reporter: "This isn't Game of Thrones or Westeros we're not going for Red Wedding shocks." He promised surprises that feel inevitable and satisfying rather than painful. The episode closes with David Bowie's original "Heroes," a suggestion from Joe Keery (Steve) that the Duffers deemed perfect, having saved it for the end.