Strangest Thing season 1
| Strangest Thing | |
|---|---|
| Season 1 | |
| File:Strangest Thing S1 poster.jpg Promotional poster | |
| Showrunners | |
| Starring | |
| No. of episodes | 8 |
| Release | |
| Original network | Netflix |
| Original release | October 11, 2024 |
The first season of the American science fiction, horror drama television series Strangest Thing premiered worldwide on the streaming service Netflix on October 11, 2024. The series was created by Ethan Krantz, who also serves as showrunner and executive producer alongside Leila Baines and Connor Price.
The season stars Emily Keene, Jackson Mateo, Oscar Lin, Julia Park, Cameron Drew, and Amari Hart. Set in the fictional town of Grange Hill, Oregon, in 1992, the season follows a group of teenagers who investigate a bizarre meteor impact, uncovering a Cold War-era research program called The Echo Protocol. As strange disappearances, memory anomalies, and hallucinations escalate, they meet Iris, a mysterious girl with fractured psychic abilities who may hold the key to stopping a collapse of reality.
The first season received critical acclaim, with praise directed at its atmospheric tone, suspenseful storytelling, performances (particularly Keene and Mateo), and its effective blend of science fiction and psychological horror. It was also noted for its layered homage to 1980s and 1990s media and existential genre influences.
Premise[edit | edit source]
The first season is set in the summer of 1992 in Grange Hill, a quiet town nestled in the Oregon mountains. After a strange meteor crashes near Hollow Ridge, a wave of unexplained phenomena begins to unfold — static interference, shifting memories, vanishing people. Six teenagers — Kit, Rowan, Asha, Danny, Leon, and June — stumble upon a long-abandoned government facility known locally as "The Below."
Their search leads them to Iris, a girl who cannot remember her past and possesses unstable telepathic powers. As the group delves deeper into a forgotten Cold War experiment called The Echo Protocol, they discover that a breach between dimensions has begun — one that threatens to unravel time, memory, and identity itself. Together, they must survive temporal distortions, monstrous entities, and a hostile agency determined to keep the truth buried.
Cast and characters[edit | edit source]
Main cast[edit | edit source]
- Emily Keene as Iris
- Jackson Mateo as Kit Hargrove
- Oscar Lin as Rowan Lee
- Julia Park as Asha Cho
- Cameron Drew as Danny Vale
- Amari Hart as June Collins
Recurring[edit | edit source]
- Victor Sanz as Dr. Raynor Black
- Lena Wu as Agent Yara Quinn
- Desmond Rhys as Officer Colin Hargrove
- Ellie Brandt as Grace Collins
- Travis Knox as Principal Morrow
- Mira Das as Lexa, a hacker and conspiracy theorist
Episodes[edit | edit source]
| No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | "Chapter One: The Empty" | Ethan Krantz | Ethan Krantz | October 11, 2024 | |
| On July 17, 1992, in the mountain town of Grange Hill, Oregon, a meteor crashes into nearby Hollow Ridge during a violent electrical storm, triggering widespread power outages and static anomalies across the town. The next morning, teenager Kit Hargrove sees a shadowy figure watching him from the woods before it vanishes. Kit and his friends—Rowan Lee, Asha Cho, Danny Vale, June Collins, and Leon Black—discuss strange occurrences tied to the meteor, including a missing hiker, flickering electronics, and repeating dreams. Rowan’s father, an amateur radio technician, discovers garbled transmissions recorded during the blackout, which appear to include a girl’s voice saying, “I don’t know where I am.” At a gas station outside town, a dazed girl with a shaved head and no ID wanders in before fleeing into the forest as police arrive. Kit and June later find her hiding near a collapsed service tunnel; she calls herself "Iris" but remembers little else. That night, the group listens to the radio again and hears the same distorted phrase—this time spoken aloud in Iris’s voice, though she hasn’t opened her mouth. | ||||||
| 2 | 2 | "Chapter Two: The Hollow" | Leila Baines | Connor Price | October 11, 2024 | |
| As Iris recuperates at Kit’s house, she experiences seizures that disrupt electronics around her, causing televisions and lights to short out. Rowan and Leon investigate Hollow Ridge but find the area sealed by a private security team claiming geological instability. Asha searches the town archives and uncovers fragments of a declassified Cold War program known as Echo Protocol, which studied memory manipulation and dimensional perception. Danny’s older brother Evan disappears after hearing strange static through his truck radio, which is later found still running near the ridge. Iris draws a recurring symbol—a spiraled triangle—that matches carvings Rowan finds on trees surrounding the crash site. That night, Iris falls into a trance and begins speaking in a distorted voice, reciting a string of numbers as the same message from the meteor’s recording echoes from inside the house. | ||||||
| 3 | 3 | "Chapter Three: Static Faces" | Ethan Krantz | Leila Baines | October 11, 2024 | |
| The group reviews a distorted school security tape showing a figure resembling Rowan appearing in two places at once. Asha theorizes that the town is experiencing dimensional overlap, with fragments of alternate timelines bleeding through. Kit’s father reveals that similar events occurred during the 1976 “Black Signal” incident, which was covered up by the government. Iris begins sketching unfamiliar faces, one of whom Rowan later sees staring at him from across the street before vanishing. Danny’s voice is heard through an unplugged radio, calling for help from “underneath,” and June experiences a vision of herself trapped in a hospital room she’s never visited. That night, the group returns to the edge of Hollow Ridge and sees a second moon hanging silently in the sky. | ||||||
| 4 | 4 | "Chapter Four: Mirrormath" | Connor Price | Ethan Krantz | October 11, 2024 | |
| Using coordinates embedded in Iris’s drawings, the group locates a sealed entrance beneath the old cable substation. Inside, they discover the remnants of Echo Lab, abandoned but powered by a faint pulsing core. Files detail experiments on recursive memory loops, emotional bleed, and alternate consciousness. June sees a vision of herself screaming on a hospital gurney. Iris touches the core and mutters the name “Raynor.” A man in a gray suit watches them from the trees as they leave. That night, Rowan wakes up speaking a language he doesn’t know, and Asha finds her bedroom full of water despite the windows being closed. | ||||||
| 5 | 5 | "Chapter Five: The Girl Beneath" | Leila Baines | Julia Norrin | October 18, 2024 | |
| Iris remembers flashes of a hospital underground, where she was restrained and monitored by a man named Dr. Raynor Black. Asha finds a news article from 1987 reporting the death of a girl named Iris Montgomery in a fire at the same facility. Leon begins seeing distorted versions of the group that only he can see—“echoes,” according to Iris. Kit’s younger sister goes missing after staring too long into a blank TV screen. At night, Iris sleepwalks to Hollow Ridge and opens her mouth to release a deafening pulse, causing a nearby power station to explode. | ||||||
| 6 | 6 | "Chapter Six: Breach Logic" | Connor Price | Ethan Krantz & Leila Baines | October 18, 2024 | |
| With the town under emergency blackout, the group splits up to locate Kit’s sister and stop the breaches from widening. Rowan and June return to the Echo Lab and find a central terminal still running, displaying names of people currently “mirrored.” A hostile agent named Quinn corners Kit and Iris, calling her “Subject Echo-9.” Iris triggers a memory flood that disables Quinn, but loses control of her own identity. She briefly speaks in Danny’s voice before passing out. Rowan discovers that he, too, is on the “mirrored” list—marked as “Unstable Thread.” | ||||||
| 7 | 7 | "Chapter Seven: Crossing" | Julia Norrin | Leila Baines & Connor Price | October 25, 2024 | |
| A surge of temporal anomalies strikes Grange Hill. People report seeing lost relatives, past versions of themselves, and entire buildings flickering between states. The group decides to return to Hollow Ridge and shut down the core from within the breach. Iris insists she must go alone, claiming she was created to cross between dimensions. Kit refuses to let her go alone and follows her through the portal. Inside, the world warps and folds in impossible ways. Rowan discovers a recording left by his alternate self warning, “Don’t trust the original.” Iris vanishes into a flash of white light. | ||||||
| 8 | 8 | "Chapter Eight: The Echo" | Ethan Krantz | Ethan Krantz | October 25, 2024 | |
| In the dimensional fold known as the Shatter, Kit navigates shifting landscapes and finds Iris inside a looped memory of her death. With help from Rowan’s mirrored self, they locate the breach’s core—an echo reactor designed to erase unstable threads from reality. Iris sacrifices herself to overload the core, sealing the rift. Kit awakens back in Grange Hill, alone. The others remember him faintly, like a dream. Asha finds a drawing of Iris in her sketchbook, labeled “The Key.” In the final scene, Dr. Raynor Black observes footage of Kit and says, “Prepare Subject Ten.” | ||||||
Production[edit | edit source]
Development[edit | edit source]
Strangest Thing was developed by Ethan Krantz, who described the series as a "psychological sci-fi fable about identity and recursion." Netflix greenlit the project in early 2023, with Krantz teaming up with executive producer Leila Baines and genre producer Connor Price. The series was pitched as "Donnie Darko meets Akira by way of Twin Peaks", with influences from David Lynch, Hideaki Anno, Guillermo del Toro, and Andrei Tarkovsky.
Filming took place primarily in British Columbia between March and July 2024. Several practical effects were utilized to create a surreal visual language for the dimension known as the Shatter, with cinematography drawing from 90s film grain and VHS overlays. The showrunners emphasized using practical lighting and analog distortion techniques over CGI whenever possible.
Writing[edit | edit source]
Season 1 was written in a serialized format, with each episode building a chapter in an overarching mystery. Krantz stated that the story was deliberately structured to mimic recursive logic — “loops within loops” — with memory as a central theme. The character of Iris was inspired by discussions around trauma-induced dissociation and metaphysical amnesia. The Echo Protocol storyline draws loose inspiration from MK-Ultra, but expands into metaphysics and nonlinear time.
Music[edit | edit source]
The synth-driven score was composed by Kyle Vernon and features analog synth textures reminiscent of Tangerine Dream, Vangelis, and Boards of Canada. The series also features licensed music from The Smashing Pumpkins, Depeche Mode, Sonic Youth, and Mazzy Star.
Reception[edit | edit source]
Critical response[edit | edit source]
Season 1 received acclaim from critics, holding a 94% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes with an average rating of 8.4/10. The consensus reads: "Smart, chilling, and ambitious, Strangest Thing earns its title with a mesmerizing descent into cosmic horror and emotional memory — powered by a compelling young cast."
On Metacritic, the season scored 81 out of 100, indicating "universal acclaim." Praise was directed toward the show's slow-burn pacing, unsettling imagery, and complex characters, especially Keene’s performance as Iris and Mateo’s portrayal of Kit.
Accolades[edit | edit source]
Strangest Thing was nominated for four Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards in 2025, including Outstanding Cinematography, Main Title Design, Sound Editing, and Visual Effects. Emily Keene received a Saturn Award nomination for Best Performance by a Younger Actor in a Streaming Series.
Home media[edit | edit source]
The first season was released on Blu-ray and 4K UHD on March 25, 2025, featuring behind-the-scenes featurettes and audio commentary on all eight episodes.