With his carefree attitude towards the political situation in Northern Ireland, Colin becomes involved in criminal activities.
He and friends, Spuds and Jimbo begin to steal cars, take them for a joyride and later set fire to them.
Colin eventually has the top IRA man captured, and with his guilt he goes to the local priest for forgiveness.
In his review on Associated Press, Peter Brunette said that "even cliched moments (...) The script is solid, straight-ahead meat-and-potatoes stuff that clearly presents Colin’s options when the IRA comes after him, none of which are good.
"[3] Writing to Irish Echo, Joseph Hurley said that "is, to quote the playwright’s subtitle, 'a multimedia political rave,' but what it really is is an emotionally valid, richly evocative fragment of ordinary life in terrible times.