The film follows the trial of Croatian terrorists Zvonimir Pospišil, Mijo Kralj and Ivan Rajić, accomplices of the Bulgarian assassin Vlado Georgiev Chernozemski, who killed King Alexander of Yugoslavia and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of France Louis Barthou, on October 9. 1934 in Marseille, France.
Paolo, dueño de un restaurante en un pequeño pueblo de la provincia de Roma, regresa a casa después del trabajo en una tarde lluviosa. En el camino ve a un niño acurrucado en una parada de autobús y decide llevarle a casa. El niño se llama Mohammed y es un refugiado que perdió a sus padres durante el viaje a Italia. La presencia del niño molesta a la mujer de Paolo, Valeria, quien al principio se muestra indecisa y recelosa, aunque finalmente se aviene a acogerle durante aquella noche. Al cabo de un tiempo, Valeria cambia de opinión y decide quedarse con Mohamed contra viento y marea…
When Sabrina suspects her husband Fletcher's possible infidelity with his numerous business trips to Paris, she discovers he has another wife and reveals illegal business dealings with his father-in-law, which he will stop at nothing to protect. Now it's not only her marriage that's on the line, but her life.
The film narrates a tormented love story between one of the most famous poets of Serbian literature, Laza Kostic, renowned for his sublime poetic puns and word coining and an enchanting young girl by the name of Lenka Dundjerski, an educated and refined daughter of a landowner Lazar Dundjerski. Standing in the way of their love is the insurmountable age gap between the two, as Kostic is 29 years older than his beloved one. The affair inspired one of the most sophisticated and tender love poems of the time, an utmost expression of yearning, in which the poet's unflinching devotion is linked to his admiration for a Venice basilisk by the name of Santa Maria della Salute.