[1] It features many prominent Israeli actors of the time, most notably Shaike Ophir and Sefi Rivlin.
[2] Amitz Dolniker, an aging Israeli Parliament member known for his high-winded babbling and tireless lecturing, is told he needs to take a break from politics after he collapses during a speech.
Fainting, he starts out on a dream trip to spend some weeks in a far-away, backward Israeli village that has little contact with civilization.
The farmers’ bucolic and carefree life repels him at first (and especially the fact that they have never heard of him), but then he decides to introduce some “order” to the innocent society.
The result, however, bears no resemblance to the orderly political process he is used to, and Dolniker finds himself entangled in silly power struggles, taxes imposed on 3-door closets, corruption, petty bureaucracy, and a ruination of the simple way of life the village once knew.