Netflix continues to prove why they are one of the best streaming services that releases a new trailer for their twisted comedy series Welcome to the family. It looks like a fun mashup of Knives out and Weekend at Bernie’s, With all heritage policy in Daniel Craig Mystery, who smashes his head into the body of chaos in the 80s comedy.
IN Welcome to the family, “A struggling single mother brings together her quirky family to overlook a mafia chief after her alienated, wealthy father dies, leaving them with her debt.” The said debt, it turns out, is the very apartment that Cristina (Marimar Vega) and her family live in. Together with her second wife Luciana (Erika Buenfil), who also loses big in the deal, they formulate a plan: Hide the body until the tendon patriarch can be false to return ownership over all ABC to the family and exceeds a increase in a rising bosser. But with a curious neighbor who pears around and a love police officer in the case, things begin to loosen as the family desperately tries to keep their ruse under packaging.
Judging by the trailer, as you can see below, the show seems to be an absolute explosion for fans of crime comedy, with everything from cartoonish mafioso and over-the-top violence to absurd characters to a lawyer doing Breaking Bad‘S Saul Goodman looks like a virtue paragon. Meanwhile, the submerged setting and bickring appeals family dynamics to anyone who felt Modern family needed more organized crime.
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The title Bienvenidos a la family In its original Mexico, the show is a remake of the Catalan Benvinguts a la Família, who ran for two seasons in his homeland before finding international recognition when it was acquired by Netflix for global release.
Confusing is both now available on the streamer under Welcome to the family Title, so be sure to check the release year. That said, the Catalonian version is worth looking at, receiving critical recognition at the time of release in 2018 and is positive compared to Weed and Shameless. Critics also pointed out how its themes of deferral and displacement bind into the larger context of the Catalan Independence Movement and the 2017 Declaration of Independence from Spain. The new version seems to play things more wide with a high-budget gloss that separates it from the gloomy, darker original. That is not to say that the Spanish-language version has no points to do, but fans of the original would be wise to expect a more popcorn-friendly approach this time out.
Either way, I’m always here for a new black comedy, especially one from home to After life and Santa Clarita Diet. And with a role crew that will be known for someone up to speed with Mexican cinema and Telenovelas – including Ana Layevska, Erick Elías and Martín Altomaro – Welcome to the family is one I will check out when it arrives new on Netflix in March.