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9) Laszlo & Nadja’s Inability to Keep a Familiar Alive Throughout the first few episodes, it becomes very clear that there’s something special about Guillermo.
Angry Nadja is the best Nadja. Especially when her frustration is vented on Colin Robinson, e.g. in Season 2’s “Witches” when she yells “It’s the same room, Professor Pig D-ck!” ...
Also in the group are the married vampires Laszlo and Nadja, and a host who is conflicted about becoming a vampire. The show is based on a 2014 movie and recently completed its sixth season.
In episode 6, “Laszlo and Nandor try to exorcise the demon who had possessed their neighbor Sean.” Here is a look at “What We Do In The Shadows” season 6 from FX Network’s YouTube Channel: ...
Painting Laszlo as some mascot for the self-involved petty bourgeoisie would be easy to do if Berry’s performance didn’t smash all expectations. Laszlo is pompous, set in his ways, and ...
Seeing Nadja in boss mode is always a treat and forcing her to work with Guillermo (the accountant) and the Guide (Kristen Schaal) — who technically oversees the space — helps keep the scene hot.
Vampires may be eternal but TV shows are not, including What We Do in the Shadows, whose celebrated run on FX comes to a hilarious close with its sixth and final season. Having long since outshone ...
Because Nandor, Laszlo, Nadja, and Colin Robinson are hopeless incompetents, they quickly turn to Guillermo for help. Fortunately, he’s not far away, considering that he’s been living for months in ...
Instead of using that opportunity as a chance for a do-over, the show makes it clear that even the blankest of slates won’t change who Laszlo, Nadja, Nandor, Colin, and Guillermo are.
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — For six seasons, Matt Berry and Natasia Demetriou have had one hell of a turn as Laszlo and Nadja on “What We Do In The Shadows.” But would the actors ever consider ...
Perhaps one of the more iconic attributes about Nadja and Laszlo — outside of their magnificent clothing and tendencies to go from zero to 100 instantaneously — are their intonations.