“What We Do in the Shadows” is back. Our TV critic also recommends a beachy Australian procedural.
This is a preview of the Watching newsletter, which is now reserved for Times subscribers. Sign up to get it in your inbox four times a week.
Dear Watchers,
Netflix announced on Saturday that it has picked up “Manifest” for a fourth and final season after the show was canceled by NBC earlier this summer.
Have a chill week.
I want something beachy but still murder-y
‘My Life Is Murder’
When to watch: Now, on Acorn.
Lucy Lawless stars in this Australian procedural as Alexa, a retired cop who just can’t stay out of the murder-solving game. The show sometimes feels a little retro thanks to its unfussy pacing and to bumper music that sounds as if it were from a ’90s sitcom, and its tone is more like that of “Psych” or “Monk” than of a grueling European misery opera. There’s a sunny ease and quirk to it all, and Lawless is a lot fun to watch. The entire 10-episode first season is available to stream, and the first two episodes of Season 2 are, too; new episodes arrive Mondays through Oct. 25.
I need a comedy that’s genuinely ha-ha funny
‘What We Do in the Shadows’
When to watch: Thursday at 10 p.m., on FX.
Oh thank God, one of the best current comedies is back this week for its third season. You’ll get more out of the continuing plots if you start at the beginning — Seasons 1 and 2 are streaming on Hulu — but don’t let a completeness fetish keep you from the ridiculous joys of these Staten Island vampires. We pick up in the aftermath of Guillermo’s heroics at the end of last season, where he killed a bunch of other vampires to protect our crew; this violates vampire law, though, so now he is imprisoned in a cage in the basement. “Shadows” thrives on clashes of majesty and mundanity, the fancy-schmancy lore contrasted with sibling-style bickering. If you are feeling a bit frayed right now and want something brilliant and silly, a true pleasure, watch this.
Also this week
-
The fantastic, strange comedy “Garth Marenghi’s Darkplace,” which stars Matt Berry from “What We Do in the Shadows,” is now on Peacock in addition to Amazon Prime Video.
-
“Sparking Joy,” a new Marie Kondo show, arrives Tuesday, on Netflix. It’s only three episodes, and none of them sparked much joy in me; they’re pretty similar to “Tidying Up With Marie Kondo” but phonier and less helpful.
-
“Future of Work,” a three-part documentary, begins Wednesday at 10 p.m., on PBS. (Check local listings.)
-
Season 4 of “A.P. Bio” arrives Thursday, on Peacock.
"current" - Google News
August 31, 2021 at 05:34AM
https://ift.tt/2Yc84ph
Watch One of the Best Current Comedies on TV - The New York Times
"current" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3b2HZto
https://ift.tt/3c3RoCk
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "Watch One of the Best Current Comedies on TV - The New York Times"
Post a Comment