Mike Flanagan’s The Midnight Club Review

Mike Flanagan’s The Midnight Club feels like Are You Afraid of the Dark but with strong ties to mortality and death. 

The Midnight Club Netflix series review
The Midnight Club. (L to R) Iman Benson as Ilonka, Igby Rigney as Kevin, Annarah Cymone as Sandra, Ruth Codd as Anya, Adia as Cheri Ian, Chris Sumpter as Spencer, Aya Furukawa as Natsuki, Sauriyan Sapkota as Amesh in episode 104 of The Midnight Club. Cr. Eike Schroter/Netflix © 2022

The Midnight Club Review

Mike Flanagan has become quite the master of horror. And not just regular horror. Psychological, mess with your head, kind of horror. His series like Haunting of Hill House, Haunting of Bly Manor, and Midnight Mass are exceptional and twisted. The Midnight Club doesn’t work quite as well, but it is still eerie and completely worth checking out.

Don’t expect things to wrap up in a neat little bow though, as this one ends with what feels like a massive cliffhanger that will have viewers crossing their fingers for a season two, lest they live with these questions forever.

We should mention that this series is based off of a book, however this critic has not read it… yet. So we are unsure if the ending was more definitive in that version of the story.

The Midnight Club Netflix series review
The Midnight Club. (L to R) Adia as Cheri Ian, Igby Rigney as Kevin, Annarah Cymone as Sandra, Iman Benson as Ilonka, Aya Furukawa as Natsuki, Ruth Codd as Anya, Sauriyan Sapkota as Amesh, Chris Sumpter as Spencer in episode 102 of The Midnight Club. Cr. Eike Schroter/Netflix © 2022

Speaking of stories, The Midnight Club is essentially Are You Afraid Of The Dark. When Ilonka gets terminally sick, she researches any and every possibility to live, which is when she discovers Brightcliffe. It is a hospice for teenagers, however there was one girl who was healed there. Determined to discover how she did it, and replicate the results for herself, she starts to poke around the manor almost instantly. 

Starting almost the moment she arrives, she has visions of an older couple, but mostly an old lady, as well as sees the manor in its former state. She instantly connects with some of the other kids there, while also butting heads with some of them. They all get together, every night at midnight, to tell scary stories. They also have a pact with each other that when one of them inevitably passes away, they will do everything and anything they can in order to prove there is life on the other side.

The Midnight Club Netflix series review
The Midnight Club. Samantha Sloyan as Shasta in episode 102 of The Midnight Club. Cr. Eike Schroter/Netflix © 2022

Shasta Is Underused

Partway through the season, Ilonka meets a woman named Shasta, who lives near, but not on, the Brightcliffe property. She is strange from the start and audiences will instantly not trust her, however Ilonka does. She introduces her to rituals, which Ilonka also learns from Julia Jayne’s journal — the girl who lived.

While Samantha Sloyan plays this role perfectly, viewers will be left wanting more from this character. The focus is on the children, as it should be, however the Shasta storyline is intriguing as well. It eventually has its time to shine toward the end of the season, however most people will be left wanting just a bit more. 

The Midnight Club Netflix series review
The Midnight Club. (L to R) Iman Benson as Ilonka, Igby Rigney as Kevin in episode 101 of The Midnight Club. Cr. Eike Schroter/Netflix © 2022

Stories Within A Story

Because of The Midnight Club, there are stories within stories told in every episode. Some of these work much better than others, which almost feels intentional at times. These stories are often wrapped up in one episode, however Kevin and Ilonka’s stories span over a few episodes. These are both great stories but in all honesty, not even the best ones. Intriguing certainly, but not the best. 

The other characters all get their own stories which are very clearly based on their true lives to some degree. At the very least they have small ties to something they went through, or a lesson that they themselves need to learn. They range from psychological thriller, to flat out horror, but each of them brings something important to the overall story of The Midnight Club. 

The Midnight Club Netflix series review
The Midnight Club. (L to R) Igby Rigney as Kevin, Iman Benson as Ilonka in episode 103 of The Midnight Club. Cr. Eike Schroter/Netflix © 2022

When there isn’t a story being told, the rest of the show gives us the search for healing — for the most part anyways. These kids are facing death, much earlier than they ever expected to, and that adds in the element of mortality. Of course, they all deal with this in their own way, and not just through the stories they are telling at their nightly meetings. 

We get to learn a lot about them when in the “real world” too. There are a few family days that occur, allowing us to see how they interact with those that aren’t sick. For such a large ensemble cast, it feels like we get to know them all on a deeper level, making it easy to connect to and root for them. This is difficult because they are terminal, and viewers know that at any moment it could be the end for one of them. 

The Midnight Club Netflix series review
The Midnight Club. (L to R) Sauriyan Sapkota as Amesh, Chris Sumpter as Spencer, Igby Rigney as Kevin, Adia as Cheri, Annarah Cymone as Sandra, Iman Benson as Ilonka, Aya Furukawa as Natsuki in episode 107 of The Midnight Club. Cr. Eike Schroter/Netflix © 2022

Each of the components, the Are You Afraid Of The Dark-esque tales, and in reality plot line, are interesting enough to keep audiences hitting that next episode button. However neither of them fully works. There are a few small plot holes and whole ton of questions left after the final episode of The Midnight Club.

Currently there are no announced plans for a season two, which will be infuriating for most viewers who have become invested in these kids and their stories. There is far too much left open to make The Midnight Club season one work as a standalone. Sure, some plot points get wrapped up, but it isn’t just the final shot of the finale that poses questions. In an effort to remain spoiler free we don’t dive into the details, but there are other pressing questions about things that occurred earlier in the season that are never answered — and we want answers. 

The Midnight Club Netflix series review
The Midnight Club. (L to R) Iman Benson as Ilonka, Matt Biedel as Tim Pawluk in episode 110 of The Midnight Club. Cr. Eike Schroter/Netflix © 2022

Overall Thoughts On The Midnight Club

The Midnight Club is ten episodes and an easy binge. It starts off a little slow but eventually becomes one of those shows you just cannot stop watching because you have an incessant need to know what happens. There are a few plot holes, but nothing major enough to take away from the story as a whole.

One of the best parts is the literally scary stories told by the Midnight Club, as that is how we get to know the characters. Their hopes, dreams, fears, and their past. This is a brilliant way to make us feel for them, which will cause some truly touching and emotional moments throughout the series.

The story happening outside of the stories is good on its own, but it feels slow at times and rushed at others. It perfectly broken up by the meetings of the club however, giving this series the pacing that it needs towards the end. 

Not Mike Flanagan’s best, but still some impressive work. The actors who play the children of Brightcliffe do a wonderful job of pulling in viewers and making them feel things — making them face their own mortality. The moral of the story here is to use the time you have left, no matter how much it is, to allow yourself to be happy. Truly happy. 

It’s like Are You Afraid of the Dark that also forces viewers to face their own mortality. This series is emotional, dealing with a lot of death and sickness, but also chilling and downright scary at times. Mike Flanagan has done it again.

Rating: 3.5 out of 5

NEXT: Midnight Mass Review: Unafraid to Tackle Religious Faith & Doubt

The Midnight Club Netflix poster

About The Midnight Club

At a hospice for terminally ill young adults, eight patients come together every night at midnight to tell each other stories — and make a pact that the next of them to die will give the group a sign from the beyond. Based on the 1994 novel of the same name as well as other works by Christopher Pike.

The Midnight Club is streaming now on Netflix.

Hot this week

ENHYPEN Takes Over SDCC With Original Story ‘Dark Moon’

K-Pop's ENHYPEN takes over San Diego Comic Con 2026 with epic original story 'Dark Moon': live performances, panel, and more.

Descendants: Wicked Wonderland Review

Descendants: Wicked Wonderland continues the story that started in Rise of Red perfectly, with more catchy songs & incredible production design.

Ava Ro Talks Lila Goes Viral, Her Producer Era, and Making an Environmental Impact

Mama’s Geeky chats with Ava Ro about her starring role in Lila Goes Viral, stepping into her producer era, and inspiring real climate action.

Timothée Chalamet & Denis Villeneuve Tease Dune: Part 3: “Even the Good Can Be Corrupted”

Timothée Chalamet and Denis Villeneuve break down the intense,...

Tom Cruise Is Like You Have Never Seen Him Before in Digger

See what Tom Cruise had to say about finding the rhythm of his massive new cinematic experience, Digger, coming to theaters & IMAX this October.

Related Articles

Popular Categories