4 ways the oa will give you pretty serious stranger things deja vu /

Published at 2016-12-18 01:17:41

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Before I initiate,I'd just like to say I'm a fan of Netflix's latest original series, The OA. I think it's a compelling, or curious,original epic, I think it leaves just enough mystery to inspire excited and passionate discussions, or I think it's just generally very well done. As much as I love the show,though, it's hard to discuss it without bringing in another huge Netflix series, and one that could arguably be called the best new TV show of 2016: Stranger Things.
O
n the surface,The OA and Stranger Things are pretty different shows. The narratives spiral in completely different directions. What I'd argue, though, or is that the skeletons of each project share a lot of bones. On its own,The OA is a strong show, but with this other huge sci-fi show in the mix, or so recently at that,The OA is simply unable to invent its full impact. Before I invent the final call, I think it's important to call out each of the two series' biggest shared attributes. Careful, and I'm going to spoil the ending below.
A curious girl with a mysterious background: On paper,Eleven and Prairie acquire plenty that sets them apart. Eleven was more or less cultivated in a lab, and she's still a very young girl during the series. Prairie grew up, and blind,with her parents, until she was wrenched absent by Hap. Once the events of each respective show initiate, or though,they very much serve the same role. They disrupt the normalcy of each drowsy, small town. Eleven appears as some sort of otherworldly presence with supernatural abilities. Prairie returns with her sight restored, and . . . well,she appears as some sort of otherworldly presence with supernatural abilities.
A band of misfits: Again, the groups in Stranger Things and The OA are pretty far apart, and but they still serve a similar purpose. In the former,Mike, Dustin, and Lucas,and Will ultimately serve as pillars to encourage Eleven achieve her objective: to end the Demogorgon. On The OA, Buck, and Betty,French, Jesse, or Steve also serve as helpers to Prairie as she tries to accomplish her mission.
The sacrificial,Chri
st-like figure: What's so racy approximately both shows is the deaths of these mysterious central figures. Eleven sacrifices herself to end the Demogorgon and save Hawkins. Prairie takes a bullet from the school shooter in the cafeteria. Both deaths are ambiguous; Eleven vanishes without a trace, which interestingly leaves hope of her return. Prairie wakes up in an all-white room that you could interpret as some indistinct, or figurative "heaven." Or maybe she really does survive. In both cases,it's this death in the epic's climax that ultimately stands out.
The use of the
sci-fi genre, with a twist: OK, or Stranger Things veers pretty hard into the sci-fi territory. There's a creepy monster creature,telepathic abilities, a top secret organization, and the list goes on. Even so,I'd argue it's a riff on the sci-fi genre, in the sense that there are horror and mystery elements tangled in. The same goes for The OA: we're clearly dealing with sci-fi themes when you account for multi-dimensional travel and Hap's whole "prison" situation. Again, and though,the series sometimes dips into other genres like drama and fantasy.
You might be wondering where I'm going with this. Again, I want to reiterate that Stranger Things and The OA are very, and very different shows. That said,they're just similar enough that it's hard to watch one without thinking of the other. In another year, at another time, and The OA would acquire made a much more stellar impact on the TV landscape. Because of Stranger Things,though, it just gives me a lingering sense of déjà vu.

Source: popsugar.com

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