January 7, 2026 6:38 pm EST

[This story contains major spoilers from the series finale of Stranger Things.]

The end of Stranger Things did not disappoint. The supersized series finale — which streamed on Netflix and released in 600 theaters across the country on New Year’s Eve — pushed the show created by Matt and Ross Duffer into the pantheon of Netflix series in terms of viewing totals. Netflix users spent 325.6 million hours watching season five last week, and the screenings pulled in an estimated $20-$25 million in theater chain revenue over that period.

When speaking recently to The Hollywood Reporter, the Duffer Brothers, who wrote and directed the finale, “Chapter Eight: The Rightside Up,” said they consulted all of the actors about their endings so they could stick the landing. “They know their character inside and out,” said Ross Duffer. “So we wanted to make sure that they also felt good about where their characters are.”

The ending that changed the most, they revealed, was the rooftop scene for the older teens on the series played by Natalia Dyer, Charlie Heaton, Maya Hawke and Joe Keery. “We worked on it mostly on the day with the actors and there’s an even longer version of that scene that’s at least five minutes longer,” Ross revealed. And the teary final scene with the main younger cast played by Finn Wolfhard, Noah Schnapp, Caleb Mclaughlin, Gaten Matarazzo and Sadie Sink passing the torch of childhood onto the next generation led by Nell Fisher transcended acting.

“When you talk about real feelings fueling a fictional scene, in the last 15 minutes of the finale, you have that very deeply,” executive producer Shawn Levy told THR. “You have scenes that are about these characters, but scenes that also capture the feelings among these actors and all of us who made this show together for almost a decade.”

As for Millie Bobby Brown’s up-in-the-air ending for Eleven — if she truly disappeared or is still out there, as Mike (Wolfhard) chooses to believe — the Duffers are leaving things open ended. “The characters can’t know and the audience can’t know because then it puts Eleven in danger and her sacrifice was for nothing. So there’s a point in not knowing. The boys obviously choose to believe. I’m not sure what the majority of people are thinking, but dipping my toes a little bit into social media, it seems like people are choosing to believe and are going to Mike Wheeler route,” Matt Duffer told THR.

Below, THR spoke with many on the ensemble throughout the final season’s release about their feelings when they read and filmed their final scenes. Here’s what they’ve said about bidding goodbye to their last decade of starring on Stranger Things.



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