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- Hendrik is sixteen, a big city kid, and vexed to learn that his mother is moving with him and his little brother Eddi to a village in the south of Austria. To make matters worse, the locals shun the new rustic family home. They say it has been haunted ever since a mother poisoned her two sons in there many decades ago. When a sleep- walking Eddi starts carving strange symbols into the walls, Hendrik and his friends set off on a quest to lift the secret of the spooky house.
- During a harsh Winter in 1895 two mentally and physically mistreated siblings live with their abusive father on a small farm in the mountains. The older sister attempts to avoid any conflicts with her father. Her little brother has fallen into a state of anxiety and shock. Both live in constant fear of their father's frequent outbursts fueled by his rage. The situation of the siblings seems hopeless until one day the patriarch injures himself dangerously. His life now lies in the hands of his children - is this finally the opportunity to end their desperate situation?
- An emergency call from a moving car at night alerts the police in Carinthia: "Eisner, BKA Vienna, service number 318-12-58. Need support!" A little later, Lieutenant Colonel Moritz Eisner was seriously injured by a shot in the head and was found motionless behind the wheel of his car in a quarry. When he wakes up in the intensive care unit, he has no idea what happened. Because he suffers from a "retrograde amnesia" which suppresses the traumatic experience itself. A fatal consequence of the gunshot wound. After his discharge from the hospital, he searches in vain in his office for clues about his trip to this weekend vacation. His colleague Bibi Fellner and daughter Claudia cannot help either. Moritz Eisner really wants to find out what happened to him. So he directs the taxi that is to take him home on the instructions of his boss, Ernst Rauter, to Carinthia. The arrival of Eisner, who suffers from speech disorders and dropouts, gets around like wildfire in the place, and not everyone is happy to see him. His first point of contact is the local police, because he wants to follow the trail of a silver-gray car that he can vaguely remember. Inspector Josef Hudle had found Eisner. But he knows nothing about such a vehicle. One woman still remembers that Moritz Eisner bought red roses and a bottle of champagne from her and asked how to get to the Kapplerhütte. When Moritz searches the hut, fragments of memories of various scenes come back. He also recognizes his travel bag, which is in a corner. However, the living space was devastated by an unknown hand and the walls were sprayed with Nazi graffiti. The two BKA specialists soon find out that the journalist Maja Jancic-Herzog, whose family belongs to the hut, kicked some villagers violently on the feet with her probing questions about a massacre at the "Persmanhof" in the last days of the Second World War . And that her husband Richard Herzog had filed a missing person report. During the investigation of the gravel pond in the quarry, a car is recovered. The dead Maja Jancic-Herzog lies in the hold - shot, apparently at close range. On her laptop, which was hidden under the spare wheel, you can see how far she had come with her documentation. Particularly explosive: The last survivor of the terrible event, Jozefa Karnicar, reveals to the filmmaker that one of the perpetrators involved in the massacre apparently still lives undisturbed among them.