What We Do In The Shadows - Season 2 May 2026
The Undead, the Unhinged, and the Unemployed: How What We Do in the Shadows Season 2 Perfects the Sitcom of Immortal Boredom
Character dynamics are the blood-pumping heart of Season 2. The show wisely pivots away from the "will they/won't they" tension between Guillermo (Harvey Guillén) and his master, Nandor, instead focusing on Guillermo’s secret identity as a vampire killer. Guillermo’s arc is the season’s emotional and comedic spine. As his body count of vampires rises (hidden in the backyard septic tank), the audience watches a sweet, long-suffering familiar transform into a reluctant badass. The irony is Shakespearean: Guillermo dreams of becoming a vampire, but he is biologically destined to be the greatest vampire slayer in history. Harvey Guillén’s performance is a symphony of anxiety and exhaustion, perfectly counterbalancing the vampires’ oblivious narcissism. What We Do in the Shadows - Season 2
The central achievement of Season 2 is its deep dive into the mundanity of immortality. The series’ thesis is that living forever doesn’t make you wise; it makes you stagnant. The season opens not with a gothic battle, but with a “Superb Owl” party—a pathetic, misspelled homage to the Super Bowl. The vampires don’t hunt for glory; they hunt for validation. Nandor (Kayvan Novak), the once-great warrior, spends an episode trying to join the local branch of the Illuminati, only to discover it is a front for a chain of mattress stores. Laszlo (Matt Berry), a 17th-century dandy, dedicates himself to breeding a "topiary" of erotic shrubbery. The season’s brilliance lies in lowering the stakes to near-zero, proving that the funniest hell for a vampire is the crushing, eternal weight of a Tuesday afternoon. The Undead, the Unhinged, and the Unemployed: How
