Maybe this should not be the thing that sticks out the most to me but the problem I have with the time jump in the last forty minutes or so is that we lose any sort of fallout from the soldier storyline. I mean, Hamilton and co were portrayed as sort of irredeemable heels yet we are expected to believe that the moment the Upside Down gets destroyed, they pack up shop and all is forgiven and forgotten? None of those characters struck a me as the “we’ll give you a pass since you saved the world,” type people.
I think there were a lot of solid moments interspersed throughout. One of my favorites was after Vecna deceived Hopper into pulling El from the tank. I thought they did a really good job for that moment where Harbour reveals that he knows about El’s and Kali’s plan. It’s well done because even though Hopper should be well aware at that point that Vecna is unreliable and can show him things that aren’t legit, he doesn’t doubt, for a moment, that that portion of it was the truth. I thought that was effective, particularly with Eleven lying for him to try to keep him on board and Hopper persisting and insisting that she look him in the eye and tell him that wasn’t their plan.
Vecna and Mindflayer getting got rather unceremoniously was not too bad to me. The team work aspect was (as usual) cool, even if it’s a little tough to buy that the Mindflayer would be that vulnerable. I liked Will making the save, preventing Vecna from getting to El at that crucial moment. Also, nice touch that they teased that Henry would try to fight off the control and reassert his humanity but he was like, nah, I made my choice. Would have been trite if they went with that villain trying to redeem himself trope.
So El gets the Dark knight Rises ending, except Mike doesn’t get to go vacationing with her and Hopper doesn’t get to see her and give her the head nod of acknowledgment like Michael Caine.
Ultimately, ambiguity and all, I felt that was a nice sendoff for her character.