A young Polish aviator, feeling cheated by the British prime minister, gives back his war decorations. Transferred to Washington as a civilian, he meets Denis.
Staff Sergeant Blaine, a decorated sniper recently discharged from the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Army Night Stalkers), goes back to his hotel to get some sleep. Due to PTSD and noisy surroundings, Blaine can't sleep and is compelled to take matters into his own hands.
In the midst of the Great Patriotic War, twenty-year-old Pashka returns home from the front to his relatives, having served as a nurse and heroically saving wounded soldiers. At the same time, fierce battles are still going on on the Western Front, and memories from the front overtake the heroine every day in civilian life ... after all, every day in the war is like the last.
Inspired by the idea that the Unknown Soldier might be their (great) great grandfather, a group of children from Brussels with different roots fantasizes about the adventures of their ancestors in World War I.
Israeli Haredi women are expected to be good wives to their arranged husbands, take care of their many children, be the main breadwinner while their husbands study religious texts, and always vote as their Rabbis tell them to. They are not supposed to write political articles using a woman's name, and most definitely, they're not supposed to run for Haredi Parliament parties. In fact, Israel is the only country worldwide with parties that officially deny women.