“Stranger Things” fans are about to embark on their longest curiosity voyage yet.
The fourth season of the hit Netflix NFLX, +1.56% supernatural coming-of-age series steeped in nostalgia clocks in at roughly 13 hours across nine episodes, which is almost five hours longer than its previous three seasons ran. And the ninth and final episode of the season is a roughly feature-film-length 2½ hours long.
Tudum, the official Netflix companion site, released the episode breakdown and episode lengths on Friday, the week before the first part, or “volume,” of Season 4 is released. “Volume 1,” hitting on Memorial Day weekend, comprises the bulk of the season, with most of the seven episodes running for 75 minutes on average. But the seventh will span 98 minutes.
Then the final two episodes, composing “Volume 2,” will be released July 1. Episode 8 will run 85 minutes long, followed by the 2½-hour season finale. (The latest Marvel movie, ”Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness,” is just over two hours long.)
Series creators Matt and Ross Duffer explained in an open letter to fans in February that Season 4 is “bigger than ever” with a runtime that’s almost twice the length of previous seasons.
They said it took more than 800 pages of scripts, thousands of visual-effects shots and almost two years of filming to create the fourth season, which will be the penultimate season of “Stranger Things.” People close to the show told the Wall Street Journal that the new season cost $ 30 million per episode.
“It’s also the beginning of the end,” the Duffer brothers added, revealing that the fifth season of “Stranger Things” would be its last.
“We hope you stay with us as we finish this tale of a powerful girl named Eleven and her brave friends, of a broken police chief and a ferocious mom, of a small town called Hawkins and an alternate dimension known only as the Upside Down,” they wrote.
Fans also got a sneak peek of the first eight minutes of the new season on Friday. Watch it here:
The “Stranger Things” buzz is better news than Netflix has seen of late. The company recently disclosed that it lost subscribers for the first time in more than a decade, while revenue grew at its slowest pace. This is leading to plans for the streaming giant to start sprinkling in ads and charging for password sharing on its service for the first time.