The ordinary life of an ordinary family from the province: a couple, 2 children, a dog and neighbors. Dasha is a housewife who loves to watch TV shows and go shopping. Her husband, Gena, is a shoe store manager, likes to hang around in the garage and watch football with friends. Their daughter Sveta is a student of high school, changes the guys every week. And their son Roma is playing computer thew whole day and intrigues sister. Bukins quarrel at least once a day - so they have fun. They have been together for 16 years and still love each other. This is the happiest family in the world.
Petr Tochilin,
Zhanna Kadnikova,
Ivan Kitaev,
Roman Samgin
The son of oligarch Sylvestre Sergeev, Sasha, fled from the university in London, where he studied finance, and entered the astronomical department of more
The son of oligarch Sylvestre Sergeev, Sasha, fled from the university in London, where he studied finance, and entered the astronomical department of the physics department of a Moscow university. Sylvester Andreevich wants to return his son to his former life, but he wants to live "among the people" and wants to achieve everything in life himself. In parallel with this, many funny situations happen to the heroes of the series. close
The series “Sasha + Masha” is a Russian comedy TV novel Dmitry Fedorov , released in 2003 with the support of the TV channel "TNT". The couple Sasha and more
The series “Sasha + Masha” is a Russian comedy TV novel Dmitry Fedorov , released in 2003 with the support of the TV channel "TNT".
The couple Sasha and Masha have been together for three years. Of course, they still love each other, but often quarrel. Then they are ready for love to fly into space, then find fault with each other on trifles. No family life is complete without such joys. . . close
Fyodor Stukov,
Uliya Lyovkina,
Filipp Korshunov,
Roman Fokin
This story began back in 1986. Perestroika was already underway, but the Soviet Union had not yet collapsed. It was a time when there was no Internet, more
This story began back in 1986. Perestroika was already underway, but the Soviet Union had not yet collapsed. It was a time when there was no Internet, hypermarkets and even mobile phones, but they drank water from the tap, there were no traffic jams in Moscow, and the keys to the apartment were quietly left under the rug. close