The Dots
Also known asNoghtechin
GenreComedy
Written byPeyman Qasemkhani
Amir Mahdi Jule
Bahman Motamedian
Directed byMehran Modiri
Starring
Country of originIran
Original languagePersian
No. of episodes135 Episodes
Production
ProducersHamid Aghagolian
Majid Aghagolian
Production locationsTehran, Iran
EditorJavad Aslani
Running time90 minutes
Original release
NetworkIRIB TV3
Release1 September 2003 (2003-09-01) 
15 January 2004 (2004-01-15)
Related
On Tiptoes

The Dots (Persian: نقطه‌چین) is an Iranian satire television sitcom. It was broadcast for the first time by the IRIB in 2003. It was directed by Mehran Modiri, the creator of Pavarchin and Shabhaye Barareh. The show was famous for Bamshad and his song "Bi-vafa-ie." It is also noted that The Dots holds the distinction of receiving the most money from advertising of any Iranian show, thanks largely to constant sponsorship by Samsung, which is featured prominently in Mr. Pirdoost's store. Many of the actors in The Dots are reused in other Modiri productions.

Plot

The plot centered around Ardal Pashandi (Mehran Modiri), Bamshad Pahnfar (Reza Shafiei-Jam), and their wives, Manizhe and Mozhdeh Jaberi (Sahar Valadbeigi). Ardal and Bamshad often got themselves in sticky situations that they tried to hide from their wives, but they were always found out by the end of each episode. The show began with Ardal as a bachelor living with his aged father (Yoosef Pashandi) in an apartment building owned by Mr. Pirdoost (Saeid Pirdoost) who lived with his bachelor son Kourosh (Siamak Ansari). Bamshad Pahnfar and Mozhdeh Jaberi were a young married couple living in the building that often interfered in Ardal's business. Ardal later meets and falls in love with Mozhdeh's sister, Manizh Jaberi (Sahar Jafari Jozani) and they get married and live in Ardal's apartment with his father. Manizh is a dentist and has a practice inside her home. Bamshad and Ardal later go work for Daddy Jaberi (Mohammad-Reza Hedayati), their father-in-law, at his company Manchoolbaf. The show was similar to The Honeymooners in that it featured two married couples and the funny situations the husbands would get themselves into, as well as having a lovable overweight character. The final episode featured a crossover cameo by the cast of Pavarchin.

Cast

References


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