In 1942, Red Army officer Nikolai Kiselyov receives orders to evacuate over 200 Jewish women, children, and elderly men facing brutality and death in Nazi-occupied Belarus. These exhausted, starving, terrified and bereaved people, deeply scarred by the horrors they have witnessed, must trek hundreds of kilometers along forest paths to regain hope of survival and faith in the future.
Artyom is in quarantine at home. At first, he even likes that he is left to himself — the family is in the country, the boss, although he appears with ridiculous initiatives, but only by phone. And everything would be fine, but soon Artyom begins to notice strange things: half of the scrambled eggs disappears before his eyes, a glass of whiskey moves into the bathroom itself, and an obscene drawing of magnets appears on the refrigerator. Trying to figure it out, Artyom realizes that it's all Barabashka's fault, who needs to be limed at all costs.
When the police finally catch an elusive serial killer, no one can prove his guilt, resulting in the lead detective making it personal.
When the police finally catch an elusive serial killer, no one can prove his guilt, resulting in the lead detective making it personal.