Milan, Italy, 1967. Santo Russo, a boy of Calabrian origin, arrives north with his parents and younger brother to find better living conditions. Due to an absurd misunderstanding and his father's contempt, Santo ends up in prison, where he gets a “true education.” In 1978, he and his friends Slim and Mario embark on a 15-year criminal career, a successful and ruthless spiral of robberies, kidnappings, murders and heroin smuggling.
A depressed man who lacks inspiration must write a successful hip hop record for a super-star singer, while his relationships with his daughter, his former girlfriend, a new girl he met on a social network, his roommate and his therapist (all women) will (directly and undirectly) help him to solve his personal, familiar and working problems.
A killer is caught by a group of mercenaries and brought before their general. The man has a wooden box with him and says that its ment for the general himself.
“Life Bites” brings a comic touch to the difficulties common to the world of young teens: relationships with brothers and sisters, parents, friends, dating, school, sports, music, etc.—in short, everything that plays a part in the lives of young people in the 14-15 year-old age range.