Shoresy, personnage préféré des fans, grossier, gazouillant, aimant sa mère, se joint à une équipe de hockey senior AAA à Sudbury dans une quête pour ne plus jamais perdre.Shoresy, personnage préféré des fans, grossier, gazouillant, aimant sa mère, se joint à une équipe de hockey senior AAA à Sudbury dans une quête pour ne plus jamais perdre.Shoresy, personnage préféré des fans, grossier, gazouillant, aimant sa mère, se joint à une équipe de hockey senior AAA à Sudbury dans une quête pour ne plus jamais perdre.
- Récompenses
- 2 victoires et 12 nominations au total
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Shoresey is a fresh take on a sport that has more than a few TV and big screen products. This show is clever, funny, hearwarning and brutally forward all at once. You need to leave some time to get fast enough to catch all the jokes. Rapid fire humor at paces hard to keep up with. I'm thinking a cold,crazy, violent and Canadian Ted Lasso. All the characters seem like somebody you know but really never met. Each character sports a uniqe persective that is only revealed through the rapid fire conversations that take place. The sould of this show is a layered approach to manly mundane subjects. The right stacking, layering and uniqe takes make this a shining example of a small evolution in comedy writing.
Only 6 episodes thus far and they damn well better come back with more.
The dry humor is refreshing and hilarious, and the one liners are gold.
The scenes where Shoresy is ref'ing the kids is the best and if you don't laugh you should check your pulse.
The dry humor is refreshing and hilarious, and the one liners are gold.
The scenes where Shoresy is ref'ing the kids is the best and if you don't laugh you should check your pulse.
If you don't like Letterkenny, this probably isn't for you. ABC can give you something more mainstream. I laughed out loud over and over. Shoresy even showed some redeeming features. My only worry is this is so good they may try a Gail spin-off!
(Review updated after Season 3).
Shoresy, notorious as one of the dirtiest players in all of (ice) hockey, plays for the Sudbury Bulldogs. The Bulldogs are last in the four-team Northern Ontario Senior Hockey league and the owner is thinking of folding the team. Shoresy is determined to not have that happen and assembles a formidable team.
For me the best part of Letterkenny was the hockey stuff. The Reilly and Jonesy sub-plots, often consisting of satire on jock culture, were always very funny and were the only consistently funny part of the show.
It's for this reason that I watched Shoresy, a Letterkenny spin-off concentrating on an occasional-yet-incredibly-memorable character in that show. Initially it showed some of Letterkenny's shortcomings: the repetitiveness, the wasted potential for great drama and sentimentality, the clumsy sub-plots. It was never dull though and the humour generally worked.
As it went on the show developed more of a heart and the comedy got sharper, making for a very entertaining and engaging experience. The dramatic plots got better as time went on, moving from merely a structure to hang jokes on to the essence of the show. We see the trials and tribulations of a sports team, the camaraderie, the rivalries, the internal struggles, the milestones, the career choices.
By the end of Season 3 it is absolutely brilliant and has seamlessly transformed itself from a decent comedy into an excellent drama. There's still a fair amount of humour but it's the drama that drives it now.
Shoresy, notorious as one of the dirtiest players in all of (ice) hockey, plays for the Sudbury Bulldogs. The Bulldogs are last in the four-team Northern Ontario Senior Hockey league and the owner is thinking of folding the team. Shoresy is determined to not have that happen and assembles a formidable team.
For me the best part of Letterkenny was the hockey stuff. The Reilly and Jonesy sub-plots, often consisting of satire on jock culture, were always very funny and were the only consistently funny part of the show.
It's for this reason that I watched Shoresy, a Letterkenny spin-off concentrating on an occasional-yet-incredibly-memorable character in that show. Initially it showed some of Letterkenny's shortcomings: the repetitiveness, the wasted potential for great drama and sentimentality, the clumsy sub-plots. It was never dull though and the humour generally worked.
As it went on the show developed more of a heart and the comedy got sharper, making for a very entertaining and engaging experience. The dramatic plots got better as time went on, moving from merely a structure to hang jokes on to the essence of the show. We see the trials and tribulations of a sports team, the camaraderie, the rivalries, the internal struggles, the milestones, the career choices.
By the end of Season 3 it is absolutely brilliant and has seamlessly transformed itself from a decent comedy into an excellent drama. There's still a fair amount of humour but it's the drama that drives it now.
Classic in the making. Say no more.
##%@@ $@@) **^%#@@ *&&%!@@ @&%$$ #@#. **$$@## + && %*#@ %#(#@. ^^*$@# &%+%$#. (^)%$ %&##) And Hockey. What' s not to love Eh.
##%@@ $@@) **^%#@@ *&&%!@@ @&%$$ #@#. **$$@## + && %*#@ %#(#@. ^^*$@# &%+%$#. (^)%$ %&##) And Hockey. What' s not to love Eh.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe restaurant in the series, Peppi Panini, is owned and operated in real life by Jay and Julia Bertin, who play Tyson and Sofia in Letterkenny.
- ConnexionsSpin-off from Letterkenny (2016)
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- How many seasons does Shoresy have?Alimenté par Alexa
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