Kari Syysmäki, a Finnish Businessman is on a vacation with his wife in Tallinn. When his wife is away a young man enters their hotel room with a gun. He tells to the businessman that he has just tried to rob a bank, but accidentally shot one of the clerks. Now he's hiding from the cops. But when the bank robber forgets his gun on the table, Syysmäki grabs it and shoots him in the back. After that Syysmäki refuses to travel back to Finland with his wife. He stays in Tallinn and soon he's about to face both the cops and the mob of Estonia.
A young secretary, Helen, must take his boss's car to the garage. On the way she stumbles into unexpected déja vu adventures.
A young nurse, Nastya, on the eve of her successful marriage to the man she loves, a prosperous doctor, has doubts dictated by her desire to assert herself.
Once upon a time, a King had eleven sons and one daughter. When his wife, the Queen, died, the King remarried. The new wife and the children's stepmother looks beautiful on the outside, but actually she's an evil witch. She sends the young princess Eliise to live in the village as an ordinary peasant girl and turns all the princes into wild swans. The princes are stuck being swans all day long and only at night can they regain their true form. When Eliise is 15 years old, she learns about the fate of her brothers and now she must overcome the obstacles put in her way by her stepmother in order to release her brothers from the spell.
Katri Horma (born c. 1970) is an Estonian former actress. Horma is the daughter of electronics engineer and filmmaker Peet Horma. Her grandfather was sculptor and restorer Paul Horma. Horma made her film debut in the starring role of Eliise in the Helle Karis directed Tallinnfilm Metsluiged, based on the 1838 Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale The Wild Swans. In 1990, she was cast in the starring role of Imbi Tamm in the Peeter Simm directed historical drama Inimene, keda polnud, also for Tallinnfilm. In 1991, she had a starring role as Nastja in the Abai Karpykov directed Russian-language film Vozdushnyy potseluy. In 1994, she had a prominent role as Kristiina in the Peeter Urbla directed Exitfilm drama Balti armastuslood before deciding to retire from acting. Following a career as a stage and film actress, Horma retired from the industry to pursue further education. She has since worked in advertising and pursuing a PhD at Tallinn University, Baltic Film, Media, Arts and Communication Institute.
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