From the brilliant mind of writer Ty DeMartino and creative vision of director J.W. Myers comes a real life story about growing up and coming of age. The movie was made with a pretty low budget of only 85 000 dollars. The centre of the story follows a young teenage boy, Tory Hedderman (Barrett Carnahan), who is a pretty egoistic and self-centred. He seems not to care about anyone or anything but himself, especially about something that happened in the past. One day, his parents decide to move from New York to a rural place in West Virginia. His only questions were: What about me? Don't I get to say something? Angry at his parents, he starts destroying a statue dedicated to a First World War veteran in the centre. Of course, he gets caught and arrested, after which he was determined a punishment of doing a community work in a hospital for war veterans. There, he meets lots of various individuals and gets more experience in life, some through personal events and some through other people's stories. But, all of that helps him see just how selfish he was before and realizes that he isn't alone in this world. This family movie is a great lesson about patriotism and how the world has changed through time.