Canadian sketch comedy legends Kids in the Hall are returning to screens on Prime Video for the first time since their miniseriesDeath Comes to Townaired in 2010. The reveal that the troupe had been working on new material came as a shock and a delight for fans everywhere. Consisting of comedians Dave Foley, Bruce McCulloch, Kevin McDonald, Mark McKinney, and Scott Thompson, the team were sketch comedy pioneers with a show running from 1988 to 1995.

Now that they arereturning with a new show, it’s time to revisit some of their classic bits to prepare. Whether someone is an original fan or a curious new one, there are plenty of great Kids in the Hall Sketches to revisit.

Daves-Kids-in-the-Hall

RELATED:Funniest Sketches From I Think You Should Leave Season 2

Daves I Know

An absurdist musical sketch,Daves I Knowhas Bruce McCullouch singing about all the Daves that he knows. Bruce wanders the streets leading the camera to all theDaves that he has encounteredin his life. There’s a Dave that works in his dad’s store, a Dave that he has known since he was 6, and of course Dave Foley.

The Daves all join in explaining their relationship and clarifying whether they are Davids or Daves. They also clarify that they have their own hands and have separate mothers. The thing that really pushes this over the edge is McCullouch’s questionable singing and extremely questionable dancing.

Kids-in-the-hall-citizen-Kane

Citizen Kane

Any movie buffs' worst nightmare, the ‘Citizen Kane’ sketch has two men in a café discussing a film one of them watched but can’t remember. Dave Foley plays the forgetful friend whileKevin McDonald plays his increasingly irate friend. Foley and McDonald begin by talking about a movie that Foley watched the previous evening. Foley describes in detail a film that is very clearlyCitizen Kane.

As the sketch goes on and Foley recounts more and more of the plot of Citizen Kane while vehemently denying that the film he watched wasCitizen Kane, McDonald becomes more and more outraged over the 5-minute sketch. Without spoiling the end for new viewers, it’s safe to say the situation escalates culminating in an argument about an ambulance.

The-Beard-Kids-in-the-hall

The Beard

This sketch features Kevin McDonald as Donald and Bruce McCulloch as his soon-to-be suffering wife.Opening on Donaldproudly holding up a fish that he appears to have caught and berating it for a photo. The camera zooms out, and it’s revealed to be a rent-a-fish for a photo booth. It only gets more absurd from there as Donald decides to grow a vacation beard that he can’t bring himself to get rid of.

As he returns to daily life, the beard returns with him and slowly starts to take over his life and alter his personality. Donald gets more and more disheveled and continues to wander around his office shirtlesslistening to vacation tunes. As with many KITH sketches, it descends into dark absurdity and violence to great effect.

buddy-cole-kids-in-the-hall

Buddy Cole: I’m Canadian

Buddy Cole was a recurring character played by Scott Thompson. The story behind the character is actually kind of sad. Thompson, gay in real life, fell in love with a man who was the basis of the character. The character only came to life after the man who was the inspiration passed away. Buddy Cole was a character that just wasn’t seen at the time. It was the height of the AIDS crisis and opinion was decidedly split on theLGBTQIA community.

It’s hard to pick just one Buddy Cole sketch, but “I’m Canadian"just beats out the rest andclinches the top spot. Thompson waxes poetic about the struggles of being gay, and even worse, the struggles of being Canadian to a delighted crowd. Buddy also manages to deftly lambast Americans along the way while poking fun at his native country.

head-crusher-kids-in-the-hall

Head Crusher

Long-time fans of KITH will have expected this outcome, and perhaps many non-fans as well.Head Crusher is the ultimate exampleof the brilliance of the comedy troupe. Somehow both relatable and surreal, Mr. Tyzik aka Head Crusher is a man who vents his frustrations on the world by lining up the heads of far-off people with his pinching fingers before proceeding to pretend to crush their heads. It really is that simple.

Played by Mark McKinney, Mr. Tyzik is a man with a vaguely Eastern European accent and thick glasses who crouches in bushes on Wall Street to crush the heads of traders. He also comes across a rival called the Face Pincher with whom he does battle, and he even crushed heads at the disco. A standout Head Crusher skit, however, is “Rehab” where Tyzik is found crushing the heads of some local workers and has his crushing hand broken. From there a distraught Tyzikends up at rehabwhere the audience is shown a suitably ludicrous rehab montage.