The first three episodes of What We Do in the Shadows season 6 offer a glimpse at the final season of FX's vampire comedy. While they set up multiple storylines that are likely to stretch across the 11-episode season, the most important is the awakening of Jerry (Mike O'Brien), a former roommate of the mockumentary series' Staten Island-based immortals who went into a "super-slumber" in the mid-1970s. Though they promised to wake him up in the '90s, they predictably forgot all about him, and his re-entry into their lives reminds them of forgotten dreams and desires from their pasts.
What We Do in the Shadows
TV-MA
Horror
Fantasy
Comedy
Where to Watch
*Availability in US
- Cast
- Doug Jones , Natasia Demetriou , Matt Berry , Mark Proksch , Kayvan Novak , Harvey Guillen , Kristen Schaal
- Release Date
- March 27, 2019
- Seasons
- 6
- Network
- FX
- Streaming Service(s)
- Hulu
- Writers
- Jemaine Clement , Taika Waititi
- Directors
- Jemaine Clement , Kyle Newacheck , Yana Gorskaya
- Showrunner
- Stefani Robinson , Paul Simms
What We Do in the Shadows season 6 has big shoes to fill as it attempts to put a bow on one of the funniest, most idiosyncratic series of the modern age. Since it premiered in 2019, the FX comedy has been a beacon of fearless invention, laugh-out-loud ribaldry, and offbeat character-building on the small screen, even eclipsing the cult classic 2014 movie it is based on. As such, a lot is riding on its farewell season that it may never be able to properly live up to.
What We Do In The Shadows Season 6 Features A Sharp-As-Ever Ensemble But Patchier Writing
The Comedy Doesn't Always Rise To The Level Of The Cast
As has been the case with every season up to this point, the primary draw of season 6 is the What We Do in the Shadows cast. The ensemble plays perfectly off of one another and consistently finds new and exciting ways to deliver small character beats within moments that otherwise might not have called for them, especially the expository scenes showcased in the mockumentary's talking head interviews. A particular highlight is Natasia Demetriou, whose every line is a master class in comic delivery.
The Main What We Do in the Shadows Cast | |
---|---|
Actor | Character |
Kayvan Novak | Nandor the Relentless |
Matt Berry | Laszlo Cravensworth |
Natasia Demetriou | Nadja of Antipaxos |
Harvey Guillén | Guillermo de la Cruz |
Mark Proksch | Colin Robinson |
Kristen Schaal | The Guide |
The only bum acting note in all three episodes is a moment where Matt Berry doesn't quite commit to the hamminess required of a marital spat, though the fact the punchline can be spotted from a mile away might bely that the scene doesn't actually deserve his full attention. Beyond that, every main cast member — including Berry — is at the top of their game, and one episode 2 moment in particular, where Nandor is disguised as a janitor, sees Kayvan Novak deliver a series of physical comedy bits that rank among his finest moments on the entire show.
Berry and Proksch are essentially delivering Beaker and Dr. Bunsen Honeydew bits from The Muppets...
Unfortunately, the material this exquisite cast is being asked to deliver does not always live up to the show's usual standards, though they are unilaterally delivering it well. While there are still huge laughs stuffed into each episode (including a series of moments where Berry and Proksch are essentially delivering Beaker and Dr. Bunsen Honeydew bits from The Muppets dressed up in horror drag), there are quite a few moments where What We Do in the Shadows leans too heavily on sitcom clichés without amplifying them in useful or humorous ways.
This includes a tired running gag where Laszlo and Nadja attempt to speak to one another through Guillermo while giving one another the silent treatment, a joke that never gets elevated into anything distinctive or weird, two descriptors that are usually the show's specialty.
What We Do In The Shadows Season 6 Makes Some Questionable Plot Decisions
The Overarching Storylines Being Set Up Don't Show Equal Promise
Overall, the storylines being set up for season 6 don't seem to be on equal footing. While Guillermo's attempts to rejoin the human world — and the vampires' interactions with said attempts — bring a fresh energy to the show, Laszlo's sudden obsession with creating a Frankenstein-like monster is arbitrary and low-stakes. There doesn't seem to be enough material there to carry his character for an entire season, especially because bringing the dead to life is bread and butter for this supernatural series, so reanimating a stitched-together corpse is particularly special six seasons in.
Although Jerry's arrival in episode 1 is a catalyst for the season's overarching storylines and seems to imply that some major changes are coming in the show's final season — including an intriguing meta nod toward acknowledging the unseen documentary crew that is reminiscent of the final season of The Office (in a good way) — those teased changes have not happened. The following two episodes revert to generic sitcom setups that allow for hijinks, though not too many that the storylines can't all be reset back to normal by the time the credits roll.
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This may be because What We Do in the Shadows has essentially always been an episodic show disguised as a serialized show. For example, Guillermo's desire to become a vampire is a driving force for him in the same way as Lucy's desire to be in Ricky's show in I Love Lucy. Neither of them can truly achieve their goals if the show is going to maintain its shape. This is true even though Guillermo's season 5 half-vampire transformation was one of the show's most intriguing lore elements, which is probably why that overarching storyline has fallen by the wayside.
The best material is still built around Guillermo and the vacuum that his absence from the vampires' home creates. But can What We Do in the Shadows season 6 follow through on the promise of Jerry and commit to shaking up its characters enough to stick the landing by the time the series finale airs? That remains to be seen. What is more or less a guarantee is that, whatever happens, the show does have some final laughs to wring out of its premise before FX shuts it into its coffin for its super-slumber.
7/10
What We Do in the Shadows is a mockumentary-styled comedy series that follows the exploits of four vampires and a familiar living in Staten Island in the twenty-first century. Unrelated to the film of the same name, the show's vampires attempt to acclimate to the modern world but tend to find themselves lost often, leaving familiar-hoping-to-become-a-vampire Guillermo de la Cruz to pick up the pieces in the wake of their accidental destruction.
Pros
- The What We Do in the Shadows ensemble cast still shines in season 6.
- Every episode has major laugh-out-loud moments.
Cons
- The second and third episodes don't live up to the premiere's promise of shaking up the show.
- Some of the overarching storylines being set up are unpromising.