Stranger Things: Tales From 85 Granted Surprise Theatrical Premiere

Terry Beetle

Active Member
Not excited. Stranger Things should stay live-action. Animation feels like a cash grab side project. Different people making it? Probably won't capture the same feeling. And theaters for two episodes? Come on. If it was the whole season maybe, but this is weird. I'll wait for reviews after April 18. If people say it's surprisingly good, then maybe I watch on streaming. Otherwise, pass. Netflix does too many spin-offs anyway.
 
Wow, a theatrical premiere for an animated spinoff of Stranger Things? That's a bold move! I'm really curious to see how they’ll capture that ‘80s vibe with animation. The nostalgia factor is already high with this franchise, but putting it on the big screen could elevate the experience even more.

Do you think this means they're trying to reinvigorate interest in the series with something fresh? I’m also interested to see the character choices and storylines they’ll explore. Since it’s set in the same universe, any chance they might tie in some familiar faces from the main series, or will it be completely standalone?
 
I'm honestly surprised Netflix is doing this. They usually keep everything locked on streaming, no theaters. But 34 screens only? That's tiny. I live in Virginia and checked—there's one AMC near me showing it. I'm thinking about going just to see what the animated version feels like. The live-action Stranger Things is so good, but animation could be different. Maybe better, maybe not. If it's only two episodes and then streaming a few days later, it's basically an early watch for fans who want it first. I'll probably buy a ticket. Worth the drive if it's decent. Anyone else planning to go?
 
They know Stranger Things fans are crazy loyal. Put two episodes in theaters, charge ticket prices, get people excited before it hits streaming. It's like a special event. I don't care if it's only 34 screens—it's exclusive. Makes it feel rare. The animated spinoff might not be as strong as the original, but seeing it big screen first? That's cool. I already bought my ticket for the closest AMC. April 18 can't come fast enough. If it's bad, whatever, I still get to say I saw it in theaters before everyone else.
 
Why even bother with theaters for this? It's animated. Nobody needs a big screen for cartoons unless it's Pixar level. Netflix hates cinemas anyway, look how they fought the last Stranger Things finale screening. Now suddenly they do this small release? Feels like they want extra money from die-hard fans. I'm not paying theater prices for two episodes of something I can watch free with my subscription five days later. If it's good, great, I'll wait for April 23. If it's trash, I didn't waste money. Simple.
 
Stranger Things brand is strong, sure, but if they are willing to put money on 34 screens, maybe the episodes are really solid. Different team, different voices, but that's not always bad—could bring fresh energy. I live in a state with no AMC showing it, so I'm out of luck. Kinda annoying. Still, I'll watch day one on streaming. Curious to see if this becomes a full series or just a short thing.
 
Wow, only 20 states? That's brutal. Most people are going to miss this completely. Netflix could have done more screens if they really believed in it. Feels like a half-hearted experiment. "Let's test if fans pay for animated Stranger Things." If it sells well, maybe bigger next time. If not, they blame the small release. I'm in Texas—no showing here. So I'll just wait for streaming. Not driving hours for two episodes anyway. Hope it's good though. The trailer looked okay.
 
I'm going for sure. Stranger Things is my favorite show ever. Even if this animated version is different, I want to support it. Two episodes in theater sounds fun—like an event with other fans. I checked the link, there's a spot 40 minutes from me. Ticket bought already. People saying it's just for money, yeah maybe, but so what? Everything is for money. If it's enjoyable, I'm happy. Can't wait to see what 1985 looks like animated. Probably weird and cool at the same time.
 
This is pointless. Netflix doesn't care about theaters. They only do it when it makes business sense. Here it's super limited so they can say "look, we gave it a premiere!" without spending much. The Paris Theater in NY and Netflix House? That's just for influencers and press probably. Regular fans in most places get nothing. I'll skip it. Streaming is fine. If the show is great, it'll get attention anyway. If not, no big loss.
 

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