Most of the fans of Calpurnia are 'Stranger Things' fans, which is not a big deal at all. They're super loyal and incredible, and really do like the music. It's the people who aren't fans of the music and are just there because of 'Stranger Things' that really bother me.

I learn a new thing every single day about acting, about directing, about producing.

Messing up lines is always embarrassing for me.

The Goonies' I love. 'Heathers' too.

I'd seen all of John Hughes's movies. All the Spielberg stuff. A bunch of '80s horror, like 'Evil Dead.'

I think growing up in Vancouver is a different lifestyle than growing up in most other places.

During 'Stranger Things 3,' I shot 'It: Chapter Two,' so I would shoot on my days off, which was super tiring and stressful, but really rewarding at the same time. Basically, I shot 'It: Chapter Two' and 'Stranger Things 3' at the same time.

Yeah, ever since I was super-young I had a lot of dreams - I wanted to be a musician, I wanted to be a skateboarder.

I think I'm really bad at voice acting.

My parents were in high school and college in the '80s, so let's just say I've heard some stuff, man. We listen to a lot of music and watch lots of great films, but the real context they provide from that era is about politics.

I try to keep my voice natural for each character, but the spirit and the cadence and breathing for each character is totally different. It's those things that set each role apart from the others.

I never liked horror up until I was like 10 years old.

I need time to do whatever I want to do. What happens to an actor that has no life experience? They don't know how to act as a different role. So, that's really important to do.

I don't want to get typecast and I've been doing a lot of stuff to make that happen and not be the case.

We need musicians! We need them healthy - we need to dance and we need to escape - and none of that is possible when musicians themselves need support.

I'd recommend anyone watch 'Harold and Maude,' 'cause it helps a lot with fear of death.

There's always something really bad that happens in 'Stranger Things,' I think the more fun we're having at the beginning, the higher the drop.

Like, everyone knows that we all need health care, but not only is it insanely expensive for most people in America, there are so many self-employed people who really struggle when faced with injury and disability and illness.

Obviously 'Stranger Things' has given me the launching pad to have creative license for whatever I want, and I love doing the show, but when it comes to music, I want to distance myself as much as possible.

I wanted to be a director and comedian and my plan was to go to NYU. I wanted to be in UCB.

The aliens from 'Attack the Block' - I thought they were some of the most unique and creative movie monsters I had ever seen. From the jet-black hair to the neon blue teeth.

Life gets weird enough without having to worry about whether you are covered for this or have to have a deductible for that, so the less stress when you are in need, the better.

One time, when I was really young, my dad and brother were watching 'Team America,' the Trey Parker and Matt Stone movie. I walked in and they didn't know I was there, but I got really freaked out by the marionettes - just the look of them, their mouths, those grins. That cemented in my brain.

It's my given, full name. Finn's not short for anything; it's just Finn Wolfhard. And then Wolfhard means, I think, heart of the wolf in German.

Weird Al' is awesome and so humble.

I'm not a big radio listener.

I have lots of friends who are musicians and it is such a huge victory to survive in music, period - but if you get sick or injured and don't have the kind of coverage we get in Canada, you are doomed.

I'm always interested in horror and the supernatural.

I usually just watch YouTube videos or reruns on Netflix of older TV shows like 'Family Guy' and stuff. But I still really want to start watching more TV.

I watch a lot of YouTube videos. I like game play channels like the Game Grumps. But I mostly watch sketch comedy.

I'd love to make a horror movie, that's definitely where I want to be one day.

I've really never discovered a band from Spotify or anything. I've really only discovered it from friends.

Any chance I get to see a band that I like, I take it.

I love '80s and '90s music.

I probably saw 'Jaws' when I was 10.

My dad, who is a screenwriter, showed me all these great movies. He showed me 'E.T.' when I was 2-years-old, and I just kind of progressed from there. It was also my brother. We'd always watch movies together, and he'd do these voices and he'd always want to do skits and he'd come up with stuff with me.

Doing a scene by yourself is scarier - you know you don't have other people to fall back on.

Jason Reitman is an amazing director; he's really amazing with his actors and crew.

The movies I was scared by at three or four are now some of my favorite movies of all time.

My parents are great. On every job, my whole family and I try to get as many breaks as I can.

Well, we shoot for so long on 'Stranger Things' that I know Atlanta really well.

If I hadn't done the PUP video, I probably wouldn't be playing music right now.

PUP introduced me to so much more amazing music. They really shaped my sound.

It's really cool when the thing you are working on as a small team gets embraced by millions, but in the end, it's about your character and the script and your director and the rest of the cast and crew.

It was cool when the Duffers assigned a list of movies to watch.

If you don't realize that there are great rock bands out there, you should look for them.

Pup, who's like the most amazing, they're keeping rock 'n' roll and punk alive.

I guess with a Netflix show, if you're a kid, it's all dependent on how you're raised and if you have access to it.

I mainly use Twitter, Instagram and Snapchat. Those are my three.

I really used to like TVMaxwell, which is a classic, amazing, super-underrated comedy channel. And Cyndago was great.