Joe's View

Joe's View

With Joe Meyers, entertainment writer

Waiting for season three of ‘Flight of the Conchords’

HBO announced recently that the cable network’s rancid Hollywood insider sitcom “Entourage” will be coming back for a seventh season — the show’s final season, thank God! — but there has been no word on whether or not we will ever see a third season of the hilarious “Flight of the Conchords.”

HBO Home Video teased and/or depressed fans on Tuesday with the release of a new boxed set they are calling “The Complete Collection” (implying that the show is over).

The new release packages the first two seasons — 12 half-hour episodes from season one and the 10 episodes that made up season two — along with the 2005 HBO special that launched the Conchords (aka Jemaine Clement and Bret McKenzie) in this country after a sizeable cult following had formed in the musicians’ home country of New Zealand.

The two artists managed to turn their hilariously whimsical folks songs into a narrative series about their adventures trying to make it in downtown Manhattan (the mix of reality and fiction is something like the Larry David series “Curb Your Enthusiasm”).

Clement (above, left) and McKenzie had been performing a comic musical act they call “Flight of the Conchords” for more than a decade.

It was the buzz from U.S. comedy festivals and TV appearances by Jemaine and Bret that led HBO to produce a first batch of episodes three years ago.

Although much of the musical material was written in New Zealand a decade ago, it’s a tribute to Clement and McKenzie’s skills as comedy writers that the tunes fit so seamlessly into stories that take place in New York City and seem so true to the lives of struggling young artists there.

Each episode contains a musical number in which the “Conchords” escape into a fantasy world of endless romantic opportunities and commercial success.

The HBO series benefits almost as much as “Sex and the City” did from on-location filming that captures the spirit of the city. In the case of “Conchords, however, no one is buying Manolo Blahniks or spending weekends in the Hamptons — the show takes us into a much lower-rung New York City of shared dumpy apartments, crappy jobs taken to support artistic work, and a life lived so close to the financial edge that using a debit card to make a purchase for $2.79 can trigger an economic disaster.

“Conchords” gently satirizes the Manhattan music scene, with the two singer-songwriters landing gigs in the tiniest and most far-flung clubs and finding themselves the object of a female stalker who is their only real fan (comedienne Kristen Schaal who is brilliant the role of Mel). Their manager is a fellow New Zealander, Murray Hewitt (Rhys Darby), who works in the tiny N.Z. consulate and who appears to know nothing about the music business.

One of the show’s running jokes — in seasons one and two — is the way that these folks from New Zealand come in at the very bottom of the vast New York City immigrant community (most people think they’re from Australia or England).

“Flight of the Conchords” is the sort of quirky comedy that sneaks up on a viewer — with some gags as broad as the side of a barn and others virtually subliminal (only to be be picked up in a second viewing). The mix of slapstick and sophistication — and the oddball musical numbers — sometimes recalls the Monty Python troupe. You definitely have to watch more than one episode to get on the show’s wavelength.

Season two was aired two years ago. There has been no official word on a third season — HBO said last year it would like one, Bret and Jemaine say they doubt they can come up with enough new musical material.

The two seasons are classic TV comedy but it would be a shame if such a terrific show died after only 22 episodes.

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