But why did we have to break up after all? We were all serious, on the second of September. Literally the whole story of the series.
Yes, Kinopoisk and TNT decided to make a series based on the famous song of Mikhail Shufutinsky, by the way, Mikhail himself also starred in this series, but as a cameo in series 1, 6 and 8, but at the very end we learn that he is an important key figure for all that is happening, of course, because he is the author of this song, but it is strange that the main characters did not recognize him. But when he appears, the guys are trying to find out the true meaning of the song, to which Mikhail in the first series answers: 'Yes, I know how?', which looks very funny.
Plot:
Vitya (Pavel Rassomakhin) is preparing for the wedding with Masha (Arina Postnikova) - the love of her life, and in the evening before the celebration goes with friends to swell. Waking up in the morning after a stormy night, Vitya finds that he does not remember anything about the last night. The next day they find themselves on the island, barely in time for the wedding and everything seems to be going well, but the third of September suddenly turns into a day of goodbye. Right before registration, Masha receives a message and escapes. Overwhelmed by despair, Vitya begs fate to return his wedding day so that he can fix everything. And, as if in response to his pleas, the next morning he wakes up on the same day - September 3, and from that moment the loser groom and friends find themselves locked in a time loop until the last episode. Well, it's kind of like a "Bachelor Party in Vegas," but only with the weaving of Groundhog Day. The series consists of 8 episodes of 24 minutes.
What's exciting?
The series itself leaves a lot of intrigue: how will the main characters get out of September 3? What do they have to do to do that? Why does everything change, but the outcome is always the same?
It may seem like we’re going to see the same thing every episode, but that’s not true. Gradually, we learn more and more about what happened on September 2.
By the end of the series, it seems that in fact in this series the main story is not the love story of Viti and Masha, but the love story of Utyos (Pavel Derevyanko) and Lucy (Olga Dibtseva), because it is because of them that Vitya and his friends cannot be released from one day.
Is the series a song adaptation?
The series, although it has a similar name to Shufutinsky’s song, but for some reason only a line about parting is filmed here, but it would be possible to set fire to arrows at the same wedding, justifying this by an ancient family tradition, but neither you have any bonfires of arrows nor cranes. It is also strange that this series began broadcasting on September 2, and not on the 3rd, but most likely this is due to the fact that the series on TNT, as well as on other TV channels, begin on Monday.
Is this a comedy?
The series positions itself as a comedy, but there is a bit of humor here, which makes it very difficult to call a comedy. Yes, there are funny wedding traditions, it is also funny that Shufutinsky said that he did not know what his song was about, and the moment when Valera (Maxim Belborodov) turned on Aphrodite’s song “Valera”, and that’s it. Don't you think it's too little for comedy?
Is it worth watching?
It will be useful once, but if you want to watch this series again, then it is unlikely. The series, like Shufutinsky’s song, could easily be the same hit, but there’s nothing in it that makes you want to watch it every year. And it is unlikely that anyone will remember this series in the next third September, but Shufutinsky’s song will still be played from every iron, because it is already like a tradition. Actors generally play normally, but somehow do not reach it. The denouement did not satisfy me personally, since I believe that if the series is made according to a meme, then the denouement should be with some kind of joke, for example, Vitya and his friends can not get out not because of something related to the wedding, but because Shufutinsky was not recognized, and in the end the denouement turned out to be a denouement that could easily be foreseen.