Just Beyond, on Disney+
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This is an anthology horror series based on graphic novels by R.L. Stine, which I haven't read. It's basically for kids, of course, but I think it's okay. And the opening theme's visuals are fairly cool.
Leave Them Kids Alone
A girl named Veronica (Mckenna Grace) has recently been protesting at school for causes like climate change, so she gets suspended. Her parents then send her to a school for "troubled girls", run by Miss Genevieve (Nasim Pedrad). All the girls there seem happy to comply with all the rules. Then Veronica meets a girl named Claire, who shows her the secret that the school's salon, which gives all the girls the same hairstyle, also brainwashes them. So Veronica must find a way to avoid being brainwashed, herself. I thought it was a decent story, and I liked how it turned out in the end.
Parents are from Mars, Kids are from Venus
A couple of boys find out their parents are aliens. That's all I wanna say, but I found the ending totally predictable.
Which Witch?
This is set in a world where witches and warlocks are, like, just regular people, accepted by society. In fact from a history class it sounds like there was never any persecution of witches (but I don't fully trust history classes in any world). However, some people still seem to be prejudiced against witches, in a way that felt kind of like an allegory for racism, and I'm not sure how to feel about that part of the story. But mainly it's about a witch named Fiona, the only witch at her school, who has two human best friends and gets a date with a boy for a school dance. She's kind of upset about her cousin Luna coming to stay with her family for a few months and attend her school, because while Fiona tries to fit in as much as possible, Luna fully embraces her culture. Oh, and there's a mean girl who doesn't like Fiona. And I dunno what else to say, but it was kind of an interesting little story, I guess.
My Monster
A girl named Olivia moves with her recently divorced mother and her little brother into her mother's childhood home. Olivia starts seeing a creepy man in a mask, usually accompanied by music that sounds like it's from a music box. It freaks her out, and she tells her new friend Graham about it, and he tries to help her figure out what's going on. I don't want to say any more, except that it has a happy ending.
Unfiltered
A smart girl named Lily wishes she could be pretty and popular, and then a substitute teacher invites her to use an app that actually changes her face. Unfortunately, it also changes her personality and intellect, and eventually she learns that she was happier with her old life.
We've Got Spirits, Yes We Do
A girl named Ella wanders off during a class field trip to a theater, falls asleep, and gets locked inside for the night. Then she meets the ghosts of actors who had died in a fire at the theater decades ago. They turn out to be friendly, but there's one other ghost who isn't. Ella will have to confront the ghost and try calm her down, and in so doing she also learns to deal with a problem of her own. It's a fairly good story, and I particularly liked one of the good ghosts.
Standing Up for Yourself
A kid named Trevor Larkin is a complete asshole to everyone in his home town of Larkinville, not just because he himself is kinda big, but because his father basically owns the town and is just as mean as his son. So everyone in town lets Trevor get away with the shit he does... until a new kid named Evan Burger moves to town, and stands up for himself. Trevor hits him, but later Evan's grandmother puts a curse on Trevor. And that's all I want to say, but there is a pretty karmic ending.
The Treehouse
A kid named Sam is reading comic books in his treehouse when a thunderstorm hits. He wakes up in an unfamiliar house with unfamiliar parents, and soon realizes he's been transported to an alternate dimension. He enlists the help of his best friend from his own universe (who wasn't a friend in the alternate one) and his real parents, who at first think he's crazy or something. They help him build a new treehouse in the hope that it will send him back home. But he's reluctant to go, because in his own universe, his father (Malcolm Barrett, whom I know from Timeless) is dead. It has a good, if necessarily bittersweet ending.