Toast of Tinseltown
- टीवी सीरीज़
- 2022–
- 28 मि
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंSteven Toast is determined to win the recognition he mistakenly believes he deserves.Steven Toast is determined to win the recognition he mistakenly believes he deserves.Steven Toast is determined to win the recognition he mistakenly believes he deserves.
एपिसोड ब्राउज़ करें
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
ToT sees the return of Steven Toast in a new setting - sort of.
The original Toast of London was pure genius and the best comedy I've seen on tv in the last decade. Well, Steven is back but this time he's across the pond - as the title implies - with some of the old supporting cast but quite a few new faces too, some of whom in my opinion work, some don't.
Matt Berry and all the old cast still sparkle but there a few too many dud performances amongst the new faces to make this quite as good as the original series, which is a shame.
Head back to London Toast, you're missed :)
The original Toast of London was pure genius and the best comedy I've seen on tv in the last decade. Well, Steven is back but this time he's across the pond - as the title implies - with some of the old supporting cast but quite a few new faces too, some of whom in my opinion work, some don't.
Matt Berry and all the old cast still sparkle but there a few too many dud performances amongst the new faces to make this quite as good as the original series, which is a shame.
Head back to London Toast, you're missed :)
The Toast Of Tinseltown ..
Matt Berry leads the cast as the washed up, flaky thespian on the search for work more interesting than voice-over work, that appears to be matched with his limited skills.
He pursues his particular brand of quirky surreal situation comedy and it's a winning and inventive formula.
I'm giving this a firm 8 outta 10.
Matt Berry leads the cast as the washed up, flaky thespian on the search for work more interesting than voice-over work, that appears to be matched with his limited skills.
He pursues his particular brand of quirky surreal situation comedy and it's a winning and inventive formula.
I'm giving this a firm 8 outta 10.
It's a good show, it certainly has some very funny moment's. Matt Berry is great once again as Steven Toast. If you like Toast of London you should enjoy it.
Toast of London is the better show for sure, but this is a worthy follow up.
Toast of London is the better show for sure, but this is a worthy follow up.
I love Matt Berrys work. While I agree this was not as funny as Toast of London I still really enjoyed this series. It's a totally different type of funny; it's silly, it's inoffensive and has some great laugh out loud moments. I especially enjoy Toasts over pronunciation of words such as Mo-t-ion Picture and Tele-vizzz-ion (tv). I look forward to the next series and hope Toast made it out alive.
I, like so many, really love the original three seasons of ToL. They're consistently weird and creative, well-written, with great characters and memorable music, some tunes I still hum to myself today. However I think I laughed maybe once this entire series at something other than the main character, and that hurts. Here are some points to consider--
1. I think this show was made at the wrong time. Celebrity fans of the original are awkwardly skyped in on product-placed laptops and tablets, and it bears the dated stamp of something made during the pandemic. I know no one's getting any younger, but if faced with that choice, use some no-name American actors or just wait for this to pass. It's hard to feel like Toast is in Tinseltown when all of Tinseltown just seems to phone it in.
2. No songs. The songs in ToL were like beautiful little pathos bombs, giving humorous and truthful insights into Toast and others to show an understanding that he isn't just a clown, but an insecure, genuine human. None of that carries over to ToT and it is sorely missed.
3. Watching Fred Armisen is like listening to comedy on its death bed while he holds the pillow over its face. Why he was cast in a major supporting role I'll never understand.
4. The only American celebrity who didn't make me cringe when onscreen was Rashida Jones. She plays a real human being who acts as Toast's confidant. Ed, though a creepy old pervert, always lends an ear or has Toast's back (quite literally in the stage fright episode). A character like Steven needs that, and she provides the other leg for him to stand on.
5. The only reason I give it the score it has is because of Toast himself. Matt Berry is as effortlessly funny and appealing as ever, and a pitiful loser like him (Toast, not Berry) only gets funnier the older he gets. It was a pleasure to see him and his world again.
It is a very disappointing follow-up to a show I truly love. But, as the Man himself sings, "all men somehow pay for love".
1. I think this show was made at the wrong time. Celebrity fans of the original are awkwardly skyped in on product-placed laptops and tablets, and it bears the dated stamp of something made during the pandemic. I know no one's getting any younger, but if faced with that choice, use some no-name American actors or just wait for this to pass. It's hard to feel like Toast is in Tinseltown when all of Tinseltown just seems to phone it in.
2. No songs. The songs in ToL were like beautiful little pathos bombs, giving humorous and truthful insights into Toast and others to show an understanding that he isn't just a clown, but an insecure, genuine human. None of that carries over to ToT and it is sorely missed.
3. Watching Fred Armisen is like listening to comedy on its death bed while he holds the pillow over its face. Why he was cast in a major supporting role I'll never understand.
4. The only American celebrity who didn't make me cringe when onscreen was Rashida Jones. She plays a real human being who acts as Toast's confidant. Ed, though a creepy old pervert, always lends an ear or has Toast's back (quite literally in the stage fright episode). A character like Steven needs that, and she provides the other leg for him to stand on.
5. The only reason I give it the score it has is because of Toast himself. Matt Berry is as effortlessly funny and appealing as ever, and a pitiful loser like him (Toast, not Berry) only gets funnier the older he gets. It was a pleasure to see him and his world again.
It is a very disappointing follow-up to a show I truly love. But, as the Man himself sings, "all men somehow pay for love".
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाEach episode's intertitle has the copyright date MCMLXXIV (1974). 1974 is Matt Berry's birth year.
- कनेक्शनFollows Toast of London (2012)
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How many seasons does Toast of Tinseltown have?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
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