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Netflix releases Stranger Things 5 trailer and confirms dates
Netflix releases Stranger Things 5 trailer and confirms dates

South Wales Guardian

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • South Wales Guardian

Netflix releases Stranger Things 5 trailer and confirms dates

The hit Netflix series will return to screens in November 2025, with the finale set to air on January 1 in the UK. All the major characters are back, including the likes of Joyce Byers (Winona Ryder), Jim Hopper (David Harbour), Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown), Mike Wheeler (Finn Wolfhard), Steve Harrington (Joe Keery) and Robin Buckley (Maya Hawke). The new season will see the Stranger Things characters dealing with the fallout from the events of season four, which concluded with Vecna opening a portal in Hawkins. All your favourite Stranger Things characters will be back for season five, including Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown), David Hopper (David Harbour) and Steve Harrington (Joe Keery). (Image: PA Photo/Netflix) Netflix, in its Stranger Things 5 synopsis, said: "The fall of 1987. Hawkins is scarred by the opening of the Rifts, and our heroes are united by a single goal: find and kill Vecna. "But he has vanished — his whereabouts and plans unknown. "Complicating their mission, the government has placed the town under military quarantine and intensified its hunt for Eleven, forcing her back into hiding. "As the anniversary of Will's disappearance approaches, so does a heavy, familiar dread. "The final battle is looming — and with it, a darkness more powerful and more deadly than anything they've faced before. "To end this nightmare, they'll need everyone - the full party - standing together, one last time.' The fifth and final series of Stranger Things will feature eight episodes: The cast of Stranger Things 5, according to Netflix, includes: Netflix has released a first-look trailer for the fifth and final season of Stranger Things as part of its 2025 Tudum event. The fight isn't over yet. Get ready for the epic series finale of #StrangerThings. Volume 1, 27 November, 1am GMT Volume 2, 26 December, 1am GMT The Finale, 1 January, 1am GMT#TUDUM The trailer features flashbacks from the first four seasons before showing snippets of what is to come in season five. It concludes with a clip of Will Byers (Noah Schnapp) screaming: "Run!" RECOMMENDED READING: Stranger Things 5 is set to come out in the UK in three parts: Netflix added: "It won't be much longer now before your favorite nerds take on Vecna in what promises to be one last epic ride through Hawkins, Indiana."

Music festivals criticised for turning park into 'prison camp'
Music festivals criticised for turning park into 'prison camp'

Irish Examiner

time23-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Examiner

Music festivals criticised for turning park into 'prison camp'

Actor Mark Rylance has said annual music festivals held in a London park turn the site into a "prison camp". Brockwell Park in Lambeth holds a series of events called Brockwell Live over the summer months. Wolf Hall actor, Mark Rylance has backed a petition to stop events this year due to feature the likes of pop star Kesha and Eurovision winner Loreen. The Oscar-winning star, who lives nearby, claimed the events are "destroying" the south London park and its wildlife. Mark Rylance as Thomas Cromwell in Wolf Hall. The actor has said: "Enough is enough, stop the walls." Picture: PA Photo/BBC/Company Productions Ltd/Giles Keyte Established in 2018, the events, including pop festival Mighty Hoopla, draw more than 300,000 people to the 125-acre park over 16 days. Kesha and Loreen will be performing on June 1 and other stars including former Little Mix singer Jade Thirlwall will appear on May 31. Campaigners claim the festival is causing environmental harm to the park with the installation of steel fencing affecting its grass and trees. We've previously said that commercial gated festivals are turning Brockwell Park into a gulag. It seems that Britain's leading actor agrees. — Brockwell Park Association (@EventBrockwell) April 23, 2025 The Protect Brockwell Park group has raised more than £31,000 and sent a legal letter challenging Lambeth Council's decision to allow the festivals without planning permission. According to The Times, Rylance said: "Brockwell Park is a place for people and nature. It is essential to many people's mental health, to our joy, our healing grief. It was a gift to the local community and is held in trust for us by Lambeth. "The imposition of high steel walls for Brockwell Live every summer destroys the park for weeks and harms the grass, trees and plant life for months — if not for ever. It turns it into a prison camp. "I fully support this campaign to legally challenge our Lambeth governors and make a new arrangement for our park. Enough is enough. Stop the walls." Mark Rylance as The BFG. Picture: PA Photo/Entertainment One A well-known advocate for environmental issues, the actor has previously called for a reduction in fossil fuels and backed calls for cases against environmental protesters to be dropped. Rylance is also a patron of environmental charity Planet Purbeck. Protect Brockwell Park, represented by environmental law specialists Goodenough Ring, has sent a pre-action letter to Lambeth Council which could lead to a judicial review of its decision to grant a certificate of lawful development for the events, the authority confirmed. Campaigners are calling for greater public consultation, a temporary halt to festivals to allow the land to recover, and compensation from event organisers to address environmental damage. The council charges festivals owner Superstruct for use of the park but confirmed it does not make profit from the events. Protect Brockwell Park said: "Our beautiful Brockwell Park is a haven for nature and of immense value to the people of Lambeth and Southwark, but it's under threat from private, large-scale events. "We are local people fighting a million-pound company whose unsustainable business practices are damaging our trees, disturbing wildlife, compacting the soil and fencing off huge areas of the park for weeks at a time." Lambeth Council said it invests £500,000 a year in maintaining Brockwell Park. The park, featuring Grade II-listed Brockwell Hall, is made up of 50.8 hectares of green space and hosts a lido, walled garden and clock tower. It was bought by Lambeth Council in 1986. A council spokesperson said: "The area of the park used for events has been independently assessed as being of low ecological sensitivity grassland, and there is no ecological damage caused as a result. "Income from events is helping us put money into diversity projects in other areas of the park, with at least £20,000 invested in this way last year. "We appreciate there can be impacts on people in the surrounding neighbourhood. Alongside organisers we are working hard to minimise disruption, having a 24-hour helpline and staff in the streets throughout the course of events. "We have also moved the date of events in Brockwell Park to earlier in the year so the entire park is available throughout the school summer holidays. "The council has received a pre-action protocol letter in relation to a judicial review claim for Brockwell Park, and are currently considering this."

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