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Is Fear Street A TV Series Or A Movie? Trilogy Explained

Netflix has officially released Fear Street Part 1: 1994, but, with many questioning whether it's a movie or TV series, here's a breakdown of the unique trilogy. The streaming service's Fear Street saga was inspired by the popular series of books by R.L. Stine. First published in 1989, the frequently revived series has since sold over 80 million copies. Equally, across the decades, the Fear Street books have also spawned multiple spinoff titles. Unlike the classic horror movie-inspired Goosebumps book series, Stine's Fear Street saga often skewed towards an older demographic — featuring much more blood, gore, and sexual themes.

Co-written and directed by Leigh Janiak, Fear Street Part 1: 1994 follows in a similar vein. Dropping viewers into the cursed town of Shadyside, the story follows a group of teenagers as they're beset by a wave of sinister, murderous forces. Throughout its tense runtime, Fear Street Part 1: 1994 more than earns its R-rating. As well as seeking comfort and respite from the horror in each other's arms, several characters predictably meet extremely bloody ends. Not content with telling its own thrilling story, however, Fear Street Part 1: 1994 perfectly sets up two direct, already completed follow-ups. Together rounding out an entire Fear Street trilogy, the next two parts are confirmed for release on July 9, 2021 and July 16, 2021, respectively.

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Given the weekly nature of the release - and the marketing - many questioned whether Fear Street is a movie or television show? To borrow a term from Star-Lord and Loki, the simple answer is that they were designed as a bit of both. On the surface, each installment is crafted as a self-contained, bloodsoaked tale.  Fear Street Part 1: 1994 homages classic 90s slasher franchises like Scream. Fear Street Part 2: 1978 was revealed in the trailer to be a riff on summer camp horrors such as Friday the 13th. And Fear Street Part 3: 1666 will emulate the kinds of period horror embodied in recent years by The Witch and more. Hanging over everything, however, is the mystery of the 300-year-old Shadyside curse. As such, while each installment has a movie-length runtime, Fear Street joins Netflix's range of horror movies in 2021 with an overarching, serialized story broken into distinct, episodic chapters.

The move was a shrewd one on the part of Janiak and Fear Street's other writers. Reconfiguring cinematic storytelling to be more serialized has been all the rage over the last decade. This fact has been most embodied by the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Since debuting in 2008, Marvel Studios' output became box office gold. This has been partially due to the studio fitting each film into a different, untapped genre. Equally, though following an individual character's adventure, each previous superhero installment until 2019 comprised a chapter in the Infinity Saga. For years, fans have cried out for the MCU to fully branch into horror. Though signs have emerged that they finally might, fans have so far gone lacking. Fortunately, the Fear Street Part 1: 1994 movie kicked off Netflix beating Marvel to the punch.

The format that originated with Fear Street Part 1: 1994 also shares similarities with the ever-popular Back to the Future franchise. After all, though the installments follow a different adventure (and also in a different time period no less), each movie also features a stinger that definitively flows into the next one. In the end, things culminate with the third and final movie, which brings closure to the characters' respective growth and the overall journey. It shall remain to be seen whether or not the Fear Street saga will conclude similarly or pave the way for more. Either way, blending both television and cinematic formats has already proven a compelling one. The writers could delve deeper into the world and characters of Fear Street, while not keeping fans waiting for overall answers to cliffhanger questions.

More: Every Song In Fear Street Part 1: 1994



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