What we do in two seasons: guaranteed to make you laugh

Staten Island leeches are back for a moment in the What We Do Shadows season.

Scene from season 2 of what we make shadows. Source: supplied

If there’s a TV demo that allows you to stand on your side (and your bladder), here’s what we’re doing in the shadows.

The first season was a verification of whether an American remake of the 201four New Zealand vampire film through Jemaine Clement and Taika Waititi could become a Staten Island television series (spoiler, succeeded).

The season of What We Do in the Shadows, which even begins on Foxtel, aims to cement its prestige as a comedy of laughter right now.

For the uninitiated, Nandor (Kayvan Nova), Laszlo (Matt Berry), Nadja (Natasia Demetriou) and Colin (Mar Prosch) are vampires on Staten Island.

Despite being secular leeches and accused of a global country, or no less than the New World (i.e., the United States), the crowd is commonly content to dominate its neighborhood.

Nandor has a family huguy named Guillermo (Harvey Guillén) that relatives of perburocracy perform household chores in the house in the hope that he will be an undead.

Colin is a creation of the TV series in the sense that he is a vampire of force, draining other Americans who are not yet in his blood yet in his vigour with his senseless chat: you know the guy, there’s one in one and in every office, they’ll probably check out the chess moves under the impression of error you care.

Kayvan Novak as Nandor in a scene from the moment one season of the television series What We Do In The Shadows. Supplied through Foxtel Source: News Regional Media

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Vampires are physically strong and immortal best friends, but emotions are best friends and neurotic best friends, narcissistic, vain, immature and insecure, and much of the comedy comes from the tension between their strengths and weaknesses.

It is perfectly interpreted, the actor touches the precise note of his characters and situations. There’s no greater comedy set on TV.

If you haven’t seen episodes of What We Do in the Shadows, you can read the spoiler-free Season 1 review here.

If you’re in the second season, don’t worry about mastering that the batch of episodes not only fits the first one for laughter and laughter, but also surpasses it, raising the ratio of laughter consistent with minutes to a new level.

Even in the first two episodes, treated with guest stars Haley Joel Osment as a new puppy and Benedict Wong as necromancer, then force the trio to support the business of the saints in their own ghosts. In addition, William becomes very professional with a wooden stake.

Bicycle helmets: defense first. Picture: Russ Martin / FX Source: supplied

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What we do in the shadows is unmistakably stupid and clumsy best friend, and it’s based on that. So the shit and the jokes are really over. He knows how to have a hard time, and brings his audience with him.

And you only have the cameos of the Star Vampire Council of the previous season with some very notable actors who at one point played vampires: Tilda Swinton (Only Lovers Left Alive), Wesley Snipes (Blade) and Evan Rachel Wood (True Blood) – to make this series have so much laughter playing with superherbal traditions and cultural pop expectations.

Of course, it’s in the nose, but it manages to land the joke.

When it comes to watching TV and in a wonderful way, it happens beyond what we do in the shadows.

What we do in the shadows, the moment a season begins on Thursday, June 2, five at Fox Showcase and Foxtel Now at 8:30 p.m.

Share your TV obsessions @wenleima

*Foxtel is majority owned by News Corp, publisher of news.com.au

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