Viewers In its original American broadcast, "Nandor's Army" was seen by an estimated 0.183 million household viewers with a 0.02 in the 18-49 demographics. This means that 0.02 percent of all households with televisions watched the episode. This was a 39% increase in viewership from the previous episode, which was watched by 0.131 million household viewers with a 0.03 in the 18-49 demographics
Critical reviews "Nandor's Army" received critical acclaim. William Hughes of
The A.V. Club gave the episode an "A–" grade and wrote, "When this final season of
What We Do In The Shadows kicked off, I noted that it felt a bit like the show was running through a greatest-hits compilation of its best episode “types”: the “single vampire quirk taken to its illogical extreme” episode,” or the “vampires try to fit in with regular people” installment. Tonight's episode, “Nandor's Army,” then, is the sixth season's run at the show's most ambitious episode style: the vampire road trip. And while the episode can't quite match the heights of classics like “On The Run” or “The Casino,” it's still an absolutely gorgeous half-hour of comedy, with Kayvan Novak and Harvey Guillén doing their typically excellent best at finding the humanity in this intensely goofy supernatural comedy."
Alan Sepinwall wrote, "Among the many achievements of this week's marvelous
Apocalypse Now parody episode of
What We Do in the Shadows is that it took “Fortunate Son,” a song that should by law never be allowed to be played in another movie or TV show after decades of overuse, and made its placement feel absolutely perfect and hilarious." Katie Rife of
Vulture gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "I haven't talked much about Colin, but all the bad vibes and hurt feelings going around seem to have created the exact type of environment in which he thrives. Last week, he was all in on the railroad scheme and this week he's taking especially well to being a footsoldier in Nandor's sorta-righteous crusade against Cannon Capital. Nadja and Laszlo, predictably, don’t like being told what to do almost as much as they don’t like doing push-ups. I’m the same way, so I get it." Noel Murray of
Episodic Medium wrote, "After all, if these characters aren't going to have these kinds of conversations now, then whenever will they? Oh and by the way, this episode is also — almost against all odds, given its deeper emotional resonance — incredibly funny. I don't want to undersell that. We've only got five more
Shadows left; and goodness knows, I'm going to miss watching a comedy so teeming with good jokes." Melody McCune of
Telltale TV gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "Overall, this is a delightful episode in the
What We Do in the Shadows canon. It's proof positive that this series is one of the best comedies out there, and it'll leave an indelible mark on the TV landscape." == References ==