Ghosts Season 3 Review: Less Ghostly Chaos But More Emotional Complexity This Season

The Painful "Sucked Off" Goodbye That Haunts the Season

Ghosts has proven to be a bonafide hit since first creeping onto our screens in 2021. This lighthearted sitcom brings the laughs by centering on married couple Sam and Jay, who discover their new home is crowded with a motley crew of squabbling spirits. As Sam bonds with her new ghostly friends and Jay struggles to wrap his head around it all, this found family worms its way into our hearts.

The recent Season 2 finale left us clutching those hearts with its nail-biting cliffhanger, however. In the final moments, Sam and Jay gaped in dismay as an unidentified ghost got “sucked off” – the show’s cheeky term for crossing over into the afterlife. Which beloved spirit left our mortal coil? The suspense has been killing us ghost groupies for months!

Finally, Season 3 lets us unwrap that maddening mystery, starting with an emotional premiere as the quirky ghosts grapple with sudden loss amongst their ranks. Buckle up, spirit squad – this promises to be a bumpy ride! Though the morbid premise deals serious subject matter, Ghosts stays committed to side-splitting satire. Just when we need that laugh the most!

The Big Suck Off Shocker – But Who Was It?

We’ve been biting our nails for months wondering – who met their maker in that dazzling beam of ghostly light? The premiere finally serves up the answer, and it’s a real heartbreaker, people. It seems not even TV spirits are immune to untimely demise.

Ghosts Season 3 Review

I won’t play the villain here and spill the phantom beans, but I will dish that it’s one of the core mansion ghosts we’ve grown to know and love over the past two seasons. Their zany antics and witty one-liners have been cracking us up since episode one. For both the remaining ghosts and us devoted viewers, this sucks in the most somber sense of the word. Can the gang ever haunt the halls of Woodstone in quite the same way again?

The departed spirit definitely didn’t leave any unfinished business behind. Over the seasons, they emerged as a fan fave by overcoming inner demons, forging bonds with their ghostly housemates, and showing impressive personal growth (for someone no longer among the living, at least). Their suck off signals the bittersweet closure of a character arc that organically ran its course.

Still, their spectral comrades aren’t taking this loss lying down (although lying is their default state, being ghosts and all). Break out the tissues as the first two episodes explore each spirit’s grief and denial over saying goodbye to one of their own. Laughs get broken up by surprising poignancy. The cast and scripts pull no punches conveying the mansion mates’ sorrow. But that just makes the laughs land even harder when they come.

The Ghosts Grieve – And So Do We

Losing one of your own is never easy, whether you’re alive or of the undead variety. The remaining ghosts each process their grief in their own distinct way. Denial, anger, depression – all the Kubler-Ross stages get humorous yet poignant representation over the first two episodes. We may be shedding bittersweet tears, but Ghosts stays committed to wringing sly chuckles from the pain.

The ghosts receive visits from spirits less frequently seen in previous seasons as they seek solace. Flower finds guidance from the Zen, yoga-loving ghost who was sucked off back in Season 1, finally earning her own closure. And Thorfinn’s booming cries of anguish when reminiscing about his ghostly fallen comrade are enough to wake the dead…again.

Meanwhile, Isaac struggles to plan a lavish engagement party without his fiancé Nigel’s steadying presence. Newly engaged in Season 2, the loving couple dreamed of celebrating their ectoplasmic bond with friends. Now, one half of the happy couple has ghosted the festivities (pun mournfully intended). Isaac tries staying cheery by focusing party planning, but the underlying grief bleeds through.

In the premiere’s most devastating moment, Sam stumbles weeping onto the mansion lawn, the reality of the loss finally hitting her fully. Out of all the characters, the departure hits our mortal heroine the most acutely. Rose McIver nails this emotional scene, proving that Ghosts has some serious dramatic chops when it wants to go there.

The remaining spectral spooks also must figure out how to haunt Woodstone without one of their keystone members. The missing muse alters the group’s balance and comedy chemistry. While the gang still trades barbed jokes aplenty, there’s a hollowness that wasn’t there before. Here’s hoping the ectoplasmic energy gets restored to its former levels soon! Our hearts and funny bones still have healing to do.

The Heart and Humor Beat On

Even with a fan favorite ghost vanishing from the cast, the core ingredients making Ghosts such a treat remain fully intact. The show continues bringing depth and laughs in equal measure, whether exploring heavy farewells or zany haunt hijinks.

Chief among the ongoing delights are the sitcom’s fabulous leads. Rose McIver’s Sam retains compassion and spirited charm as the friendly mortal liaison between worlds of the living and dead. Her tearful response to losing her spectral BFF tugs our heartstrings something fierce. Meanwhile, Utkarsh Ambudkar’s flustered straight man Jay supplies gut-busting reactions. His inability to directly interact with the ghosts allows for uproarious (if repetitive) physical comedy.

And while we mourn the sucked-off ghost, the remaining apparitions pick up the slack with aplomb. Thorfinn reveals hidden depths as the soulful Viking bear lets out his inner grief, with Devan Chandler Long nailing the dramedy. Danielle Pinnock continues knocking it out of the park as the sassy Prohibition-era singer Alberta, firing off piping hot truth bombs.

The showrunners also wisely utilize the expanded ensemble beyond just the main ghosts. Living couple Sam and Jay’s renovation providing a restaurant gives delightful recurring phantoms fresh chances to haunt. We get more antics from the petulant haunted child Trevor (Asher Grodman) and even a few wisecracks via text message from ghost scorned Elias Woodstone (Matt Walsh).

And the writers explore new character pairings that bring both breezy laughs and touching connections. Flower forms an unlikely friendship with someone from the usually separate basement ghost group, linked by their Zen outlooks on the afterlife. Elsewhere, another spirit leverages their unique supernatural talents to forge a new bond with Jay. After two seasons of Jay unable to directly bond with his spectral squatters, seeing him converse face-to-face with a typically overlooked ghost injects the show with poignant freshness.

So while we feel the pain of losing an beloved player in the game, Ghosts succeeds by the talents of its deep and delightful ensemble bench. The show keeps on displaying its expert skill melding high spirited hijinks with high emotional stakes. We wouldn’t spare any expense to keep this haunt rolling merrily along either!

Got Some Kinks To Work Out

While Ghosts retains its winning spirit three seasons in, the premiere exposes a few cracks in the manor’s foundation. Addressing these concerns can help the show reclaim its full comedic confidence.

Some pacing problems do drag the energy at times. The premiere awkwardly vacillates between heavy grief processing scenes and breezy transitional hijinks. Finding that trademark Ghosts balance between laughs and loss proves tricky. And brief time jumps between episodes create disjointed character continuity. These ghosts sometimes act inconsistently episode-to-episode, despite not aging.

The writers also struggle giving adequate emotional reactions to all of the ghosts. Sidelining once-central players for sudsy specters strains investment in the core group. We want more thor-ough mourning from Ghosts’ original gang!

There are also some questionable leaps around the show’s eccentric ghost mythology. AsSam desperately hopes to somehow bring her sucked-off spectral BFF back, explanations why that can’t happen aren’t clearly conveyed. And we still have little clarity around what lets some ghosts get sucked off while others linger indefinitely. Tightening up the ghostly logic could satisfy lingering viewer questions.

But these drawbacks all stem from Ghosts challenging itself in new narrative directions. Season 3 shows ambition examining weightier stories of grief and uncertainty most sitcoms wouldn’t dare touch. As the writers play with more emotional complexity and ever-expanding characters, it’s expected to hit occasional haunted house bumps. We believe Ghosts still has what it takes to sufficiently address these areas and reclaim its prime paranormal real estate in our hearts!

Crystal Ball Says…

While we’re still mourning the loss of a beloved cast member, early hints suggest we may not have seen the last of this special spirit. The remaining ghosts hold a séance attempting to lure their extinguished comrade back from the beyond. This leaves the door creepily ajar for the sucked-off specter to perhaps materialize again, unable to resist the chance to haunt alongside their found family once more.

The shortened 10-episode season also suggests shaking up the core cast could be a temporary experiment. Furthermore, Ghosts has already set precedent for resurrecting ghosts presumed to have crossed over.  Season 2 summoned demonic Pilgrim-era exorcist Thomas Thwaites (Robert Knepper) back despite his seeming sucked off fate. So hopes remain high our dispatched phantom defiantly says “boo” again soon!

Until then, the ectoplasm must carry on coursing through Woodstone’s walls. Promos tease upcoming escapades like the gang landing a TV interview to boost the B&B’s bookings while Jay’s restaurant opening nears. Those shenanigans should showcase Ghosts returning to silly sitcom strength after early season growing pains.

And this crew still has endless possibilities to explore comedically. Woodstone offers no shortage of dark corners holding disturbing histories perfect for exhuming new spirits. Ghosts can have its spectral cake and eat it too – temporarily mourning a beloved casualty while introducing new souls to torment our poor mortal protagonists! Where there’s a will, there’s a wacky way.

Final Spirited Thoughts

As Season 3 opens, Ghosts shows it isn’t afraid to take risks to expand its haunting horizons. Temporarily losing a fan favorite stings, but it allows space to explore poignant realms sitcoms seldom brave. And growing pains shake up the established comedy rhythms to mostly successful effect.

Ultimately, the core tenants rooting our devotion to Ghosts since the pilot remain thriving. The show’s stellar cast keeps delivering hilarious and heartwarming performances, whether playing off loss or being their eccentric, quirky selves. We still adore Sam and Jay as the ultimate odd couple comedic spice blending like catnip with their misfit phantom roommates.

While the premiere brought the metaphysical melancholy, that just sets the stage for more of the zany and touching hijinks we crave. The new restaurant set piece promises a buffet of opportunities. Ghosts has a killer cast and uproarious voice that can sustain it even in uncertain times.

Sure, the haunting still has kinks needing some ghostbusting TLC in Season 3’s infant episodes. But Ghosts has already proven itself one of network TV’s crown comedy gems not even death can conquer. With confidence that the silly and supernatural heart still beans strong, we eagerly look forward to all the boo-ga-loo in store! Get ready for this haunting rollercoaster to take thrilling new turns.

The Review

Ghosts

8.5 Score

Even with the emotional gut-punch of losing a beloved cast member, Ghosts retains the quirky heart and humorous smarts to remain one of the most novel and reliably entertaining sitcoms on air. A few early season three stumbles are easily overshadowed by the endless potential still yet to haunt the halls of the show’s clear creative vision.

PROS

  • Strong performances from talented lead and ensemble cast
  • Clever writing blending humor and heart
  • Risk-taking storylines and character development
  • Explores grief and loss in emotional yet entertaining way
  • Fresh setting of new restaurant allows fun possibilities

CONS

  • Premiere's pacing issues and tonal inconsistencies
  • Some weaker character reactions and developments
  • Ghost mythology logic is confusing at times
  • Loses some comedy momentum with departed cast member

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 8.5
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