In an isolated agricultural village in Mandatory Palestine during the late 1930s, a Polish immigrant family struggles to survive on the fringes of a tight-knit community that views them as complete outcasts. Suffocated by their family's failure to adapt and haunted by a pervasive sense of alienation, the household's two daughters seek escape from their grim reality by plunging into a series of chaotic, promiscuous sexual relationships with local men. Rather than finding liberation, their reckless behavior ignites a destructive wave of local gossip, societal shaming, and severe psychological distress. As the fragile mental state of the family members erodes under the weight of their isolation, the daughters' desperate search for connection triggers a tragic, irreversible collapse of the entire domestic unit right on the eve of World War II.