

La vie sous le toit des Tanner n'est pas de tout repos ! Ayant perdu sa femme, Danny doit élever seul ses trois filles, D.J., Stéphanie et Michelle. Pour l'aider, il fait appel à son meilleur ami Joey et à son beau-frère Jesse qui emménagent avec eux.
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La Fête à la maison Notations et commentaires
- flavo4325 décembre 2025Full House was one of those sitcoms that always hit the right notes for me. Watching a widowed dad raise his three daughters—with help from his best friend and brother‑in‑law—felt warm, funny, and genuinely heartfelt. It certainly helped that two of the leads were full‑time stand‑up comedians and the other was a TV heartthrob; that mix gave the show an easy charm that made it instantly appealing. The kids were adorable, and I always appreciated how the series explored the complexities of family relationships, especially when children were involved. Early on, the show kept things light, but as the characters grew and the audience grew with them, it gradually introduced heavier topics. By the time those moments arrived, we were ready for them. Full House never pretended to be something it wasn’t. It stayed in its lane—sweet, funny, and family‑focused—and succeeded because of that consistency.
- Noah Austin Brooks4 avril 2025Full House is hands down one of the most entertaining TV shows ever! Its blend of humor, heartfelt moments, and unforgettable characters makes it a classic that never gets old.
- paulba58925 mars 2025ADD. FULL. HOUSEI
- Ryan Cushing4 mars 2025I love it
- Callum10 février 2025Classic 80s and 90s sitcom⭐⭐⭐⭐½ (out of 5) Full House – Family, friendship, and all the chaos in between. “Full House” is the quintessential late ’80s and early ’90s family sitcom — heartwarming, wholesome, and filled with more hugs than you can count. It follows Danny Tanner, a widowed dad raising his three daughters with the help of his best friend Joey and brother-in-law Jesse. What starts as an unconventional setup quickly blossoms into one of TV’s most beloved portrayals of family in all its messy, loving glory. Over the seasons, the cast grows and the home fills up — Uncle Jesse finds love, the kids get older (and sassier), and the Tanner house becomes a revolving door of best friends, boyfriends, and extended “family.” Yet through all the laughter and occasional tears, one truth remains clear: family isn’t just who you’re born with — it’s who you choose and who chooses to stay. Every episode delivers that perfect blend of comedy, life lessons, and comforting predictability that made it a staple of its era. It’s light, funny, and endlessly rewatchable, a snapshot of a time when problems could be solved with a pep talk and a smile. And for fans who grew up with it, the story didn’t end there — Full House would later pass the torch to a new generation in its sequel series, Fuller House. Because sometimes, love really does fill a house.





























