![]() ![]() The gore factor finally culminates in the season’s sixth episode, aptly titled “E Pluribus Unum.” All of the Flayed congregate in the warehouse to be dissolved, together creating the ultimate. ![]() Nancy and Jonathan manage to kill two of the Flayed - nice! - which works out until they turn out not to be dead and violently melt into chunky, organ-filled puddles of flesh goo from the inside out - less nice! - and the respective goo puddles slop toward each other and combine into one horrifying monster - extremely not nice! Thanks, I hate it! Netflix Things get more gory in the series’ fifth episode. The process begins on the small scale: A horde of rats scurries into an empty warehouse, congregating before they collectively begin to convulse and pop into piles of goo. Instead it gets crafty and begins to “flay” other living beings, bringing them under its control before compelling them to explode into piles of goo and assimilate into a gigantic, fleshy, spider monster. However, in Stranger Things 3, the Mind Flayer doesn’t have the luxury of sending its minions through the gate to do its bidding. Unfortunately, things aren’t that simple: Part of the Mind Flayer survived in the human realm, and is conspiring to kill Eleven and her friends before moving onto world annihilation, etc., etc. Stranger Things 3’s chief antagonist is the Mind Flayer, the spiderlike being from the Upside Down that Eleven theoretically sealed away when she closed the door to the other dimension at the end of season 2. ![]() 6 burning questions after the end of Stranger Things 3Įxcept this time, we get to see the creation process behind the beast, which is infinitely more horrifying, gooey, and disgusting, resulting in my deeply held conviction: There is too much flesh in Stranger Things 3. ![]()
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