The film narrates the same thing from the balanced perspective of father Doanu (Razwan Vasilescu Razvan Vasilescu) and daughter Monica, that is, the great contrast between Romanian expectations of their powerful neighbor, Americans and Americans, and expresses the protagonist's great dissatisfaction with Americans. The Romanian town of Panita, where Doanu has lived since childhood. On the eve of Germany's defeat in 1944, Doanu's father said to him before he left, "Don't worry, we'll be back and the Americans will come." In the end, however, his father did not come back and the Americans did not come. Doanu's only luck was that an American-made bomb fell beside him and did not explode. During the Kosovo War, the Americans finally came, and Doanu, as the train stationmaster, was not polite in the face of American soldiers who had only spoken words but did not have passage documents, and resolutely banned the passage. His dissatisfaction with the Americans is coming out in his own way.