On New Year's Eve, a group of hunters finds the frozen body of a dead WWII partisan fighter. They spend the night debating what to do with it.
It is New Year's Eve. A party of hunters comes upon a body, buried in the snow and miraculously preserved by the cold. By his uniform, he appears to be a dead WWII partisan fighter killed during the civil war and the hunting party must now decide what to do with the body. When they disinter it, blood begins to flow from the wounds in the partisan's body and they carry it back to the lodge where the inquest begins.—Anonymous
New Year's Eve, 1976. Against the backdrop of snow-covered Lake Pamvotis in Epirus, northern Greece, a group of six hunters unearth the perfectly preserved body of a long-dead fighter of the Democratic Army of Greece. And, strange as it may sound, even though the Greek Civil War ended in 1949, the corpse is still bleeding. As the puzzled sextet of huntsmen carries the dead body back to their hotel, a thorough police investigation commences, gradually unfolding the team's confusion, denial, guilt, and collective responsibility.—Nick Riganas