Universal’s Halloween Horror Nights Brings Stranger Things to Life
Photos courtesy of Universal Studios
“The Demogorgon is only one creature. He just happens to be everywhere all at once.”
Patrick Braillard wants to make sure there’s no mistake about the signature monster from Stranger Things. The Show Director of the Stranger Things haunted maze at Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights insists that the Demogorgon is a single creature, despite popping up dozens of times throughout the maze. Yeah, there might be a different actor or puppeteer responsible every time the beast appears, but within the confines of the maze’s story, it’s just that one Demogorgon following you throughout this small Indiana town.
In Universal’s version of Stranger Things, that evil creature from the Upside Down lurks behind almost every corner, always ready to jump out at anybody who walks past. Like so much good horror, this maze can both startle and exhilarate, jolting your system with a primordial fright that reminds you how alive you are. When combined with the fuzzy nostalgia of Stranger Things—memories of both the show itself, and also the ‘80s culture and Stephen King and Steven Spielberg works it pays tributes to—it’s somehow both comforting and unsettling. It’ll scare the hell out of you, and you’ll love every second of it.
Braillard and his team fastidiously recreated some of the most iconic places and moments from the Netflix hit’s first season. Starting inside the Hawkins National Laboratory, you’ll see the cold open from the very first episode, the gulping breaths of an ill-fated lab technician beckoning you forth into a pitch black room where the ominous title sequence is recreated before your eyes. After a short walk through the woods you’ll come across Castle Byers, Will’s handmade play shack, and then see the missing boy himself nervously holding a rifle in the family’s tool shed. Strobing Christmas lights and throbbing synth music disorients in the Byers living room as an actress playing Winona Ryder’s frantic Joyce Byers takes an axe to the wall. The Clash’s “Should I Stay or I Should I Go” blasts throughout Will’s bedroom, with a massive hole in the wall guiding you into the Upside Down. Almost every major character from the first season makes an appearance, all played by live actors, as lighting, music and other practical effects ratchet up the tension throughout.