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A team of part-time paranormal investigators use homemade gizmos to track the supernatural, sharing their adventures online. As their haunted stake outs become more terrifying they begin to uncover an unimaginable, apocalyptic conspiracy.
Truth Seekers has just enough character and just enough humor and just enough eeriness to be watchable and involving, without any of those elements emerging as entirely satisfying.
Virtually all the notably laughs in the show's first four episodes - that's roughly two hours of screen-time - can be seen in the two-minute series trailer.
Would be almost as good if it were just a sitcom about a pair of broadband installers and their quirky family and friends, encountering odd locals as they work their repair routes.
Truth Seekers has plenty of small-town British charm to spare as [Nick Frost] travels from one haunted house to another. But the series also quickly reveals itself to be a genuinely creepy bit of horror.
This is a show about how damaged, lonely people end up coming together over a fascination of weird things and haphazard adventures, interspersed with genuinely funny moments. A future pop-culture classic.
For those longing for the snappy repartee and manic energy of early Frost and Pegg collaborations, this is a let down, all sheet and few ghosts, a chuckle here and there, rarely a real laugh.