Gatito Inmeegrante, pilot for American Fables, one of my most important projects

Gatito Inmeegrante, pilot for American Fables, one of my most important projects

GATITO INMEEGRANTE (Project: American Fables)

1. Story Questions

  • Who is the hero?

Gatito Inmeegrante, a college graduate, is an undocumented immigrant who becomes an immigration activist when the traditional activists’ counterproductive job fails to give him hope and Tancruarf starts showing he is a real threat. Sometimes reluctant and a bit shy, Gatito will have to learn to be a leader on the way while struggling with his feelings because of the risk his activities bring on his loved ones as he succumbs to his own need for love. Gatito is not the typical ethnic caricature, an immigrant content with merely surviving and escaping the immigration police. Instead, he’ll try to solve the problem himself by attempting, against impossible odds, to change the unjust law that has condemned him and his friends to hopeless lives.

Michele Tancruarf, the antagonist, moved by a hatred of immigrants, will embrace totalitarian tactics to get his goals. Smart and unscrupulous, his crusade is a way to fill the deep insecurities of his own private life.

  • What do they want?

Gatito wants to live, love and dream like everybody else, an oasis of hope for him and his friends, and he’ll try to change the system himself when traditional activists fail. He will try to make possible a law that gives legal status to animals like himself.

Tancruarf, a populist demagogue, wants to punish immigrants and, in the process, accumulate power as he subdues the institutions of Nayak in his path to the presidency.

  • Why do they want it?

Gatito wants to love without fear and leave behind the hopelessness in which he lived in the Northern Country.

Tancruarf wants to satisfy deeply rooted prejudices (to avenge the humiliation inflicted on him by an immigrant he saw as inferior), accumulate power and become president.

  • How do they get it?

Gatito will try to change the unjust immigration law by courting a liberal senator, organizing other immigrants and defeating the antagonist’s chances to become president.

Tancruarf will use a populist message to, first, dominate the Patriot Party and then to subdue the institutions of Nayak, even the press and the courts, in his way to the presidency. Scruples are not an obstacle for him.

  • What are the Central Conflicts?

In the first Act, the conflict between Gatito and both the traditional activists who try to block his ascent. In the second Act, the conflict with the main antagonist, the totalitarian governor who leads a brutally xenophobic regime, and the gangs that prey on the immigrant communities of Nayak with the protection of the immigration police.


  • What are the stakes?

As leader, Gatito could die. Even if he were instead deported back to Northern State, he would have with little chance of coming back as the gangs have taken over the border, so losing forever any hope of life and love.

  • What are the themes?

Immigration and totalitarianism are the main issues and yet they are presented differently from other stories. Gatito is not an ethnic stereotype. He’s an immigrant anybody can identify with. And though this is a political story, it’s not a partisan caricature. In his path, he will find friends and foes among both liberals and conservatives. Also, these issues are presented in a way not only deeply emotional but also very entertaining. Gatito Inmeegrante will make you cry, laugh and think. Also, though written nine years ago, it predicted many of the traits of the Trump administration. All that makes it a completely different take on these issues. The main theme is love though: what Gatito is willing to risk for his loved ones. The second theme is power and prejudice, Tancruarf’s motivations. Genre: drama (Originally intended for animation but easily adaptable to live-actors).


  • Overview

Synopsis

Gatito graduates in law in the Northern Country with the encouragement of academic advisors. Being Northern State a society of castes, his career dies as soon as he graduates though. Recovering from this disappointment with his parents’ help, he emigrates illegally to the Southern Country. There, his antagonist, Tancruarf, is using the immigrant wave caused by a drought to make a career in politics by pushing a violent xenophobic message and by manipulating institutions, the press included, as his eyes are set in the presidency of Southern State.

As he tries to find like minded-animals, Gatito realizes the harm caused by the decisions made by traditional activists, so he’ll try to find his own way with a small group of friends and followers. As he does so, mediocre activists and politicians will put obstacles in his way while his own activism will add new hardships to his life. Then, one day, he realizes that defeating the gangs that prey on the immigrant community that has ignored him so far can be the way to open their hearts and minds. This works. He organizes the immigrant community and now they have the numbers to become a threat to Tancruarf.

At the end, the immigration police ambushes Gatito and his group and Gatito dies. But then something magical happens and the citizens of Nayak finally open their hearts to Gatito’s girlfriend’s pain. Honest liberals and conservatives see the opportunity to vote for an investigative commission of the governor’s crimes. As Tancruarf tries to stop this moment, he’ll try to stop a session of Congress that is now discussing the investigative commission. This backfires when the army finally sides with Congress. With Tancruarf arrested and powerless, the commission undoes his network of influence and he is exiled. This way out will become his own death warrant as his minions abandon him in the desert. In a beautiful, unforgettable final scene, Gatito’s girlfriend reconciles with life and with the citizens of Nayak who come to share the pain that had embittered her.

Why this series?

Because neither immigration nor democracy have good narratives in the culture. Gatito Inmeegrante is the first story of a series where, in the main milestone, the milestone of the Civil War, the people, who until then had considered government as somebody else’s business, something that naturally belonged to aristocrats and notables, claim it as theirs. More, this series can make a difference in real life by making more difficult to rationalize xenophobia and totalitarianism.

The structure of this series is not the traditional one. Yet, after The Sopranos and Game of Thrones, its structure, marked by the way fourteen stories (cf. Appendix) get interlinked in a common evolution, should be much more acceptable to the public. The synchronicity of the stories has been carefully observed though so, if the structure is a problem, it could easily be rewritten with a more linear structure.

  • World

Where

Gatito Inmeegrante takes place in Nayak City, capital of Southern State. Nevertheless, this universe has numerous geographical and cultural references relevant to the United States. In Gatito Inmeegrante, Nayak looks like a border state with Mexico. In the main milestone, Nayak is one of four states loosely united in terms resembling the Articles of Confederation. After the Civil War, the New Federation will be made possible by the ascent of the Honest Conservatives in the South and of the Liberals inspired in the North by the main hero of this milestone.

When

The time where Gatito Inmeegrante takes places resembles the United States, early XX Century. The time where the main milestone takes place resembles the United States during World War II.

Hero’s profession

Gatito Inmeegrante is a lawyer turned activist after becoming unemployable in his country of birth. In the main milestone, the hero is a soldier who rises to the rank of General of the Army.

  • Tone

What the audience will feel

These stories are deeply emotional and yet they have moments of humor, moments of intense action and moments that will make you think about the issues relevant for America. All that makes them very entertainment as well as mind-challenging as the themes are more relevant for the average American than those in Game of Thrones. As these stories evolve, you will be able to see constant movement, back and forth, from dark to light. And you will find moments of intolerable cruelty, moments of sacrifice and some moments of magic realism that will bring more than one tear. But you will have a happy ending.

Movie, television and pictorial references

Game of Thrones, by defying expectations and building arcs that outlived many characters, made the public more open for an epic story that is built over several interconnected stories. Also, knowing the final outcome of the saga (which in this case is a happy ending: a society that defeats apathy, prejudice and totalitarian temptations) didn’t hurt interest for the stories in Lord of the Rings. Most of the stories are thematically built around the central story in the main milestone, where they will find their conclusion. One final reference are the shows of the early 2000s, which created a narrative for gay rights based on the notion of empathy, downplaying diversity. This series can do the same for democracy and immigration.

  • Character

Gatito Migran (“Gatito Inmeegrante”):

Backstory: Just after graduating in law in the Northern Country, Gatito soon realizes he will never have a chance in life so, at the insistence of his heartbroken parents, he emigrates to the Southern Country the only way he can: illegally.

Traits: Introverted, protective of his loved ones; shy; a bit stiff; wants to be a follower but ends up being a leader; reluctantly embracing his feelings, especially as he realizes how his status can affect his loved ones; angry at getting old without having a chance in life but not showing it to not affect his followers’ morale; getting more tribal as the threat of a crackdown by the immigration police become more likely.

Arcs: He emigrates to the Northern Country with a survival mentality (taking care only of himself). Unsatisfied with his life, he tries to follow the failed leadership of the only pro-immigrant organization available. Disappointed with this organization, he reluctantly becomes a leader but is blocked by those activists and by mediocre liberals. Then, he becomes a fighter as he finds, in beating the gangs that prey on the city of Miyaff, his only chance to get Miyaff’s immigrants’ attention. Success brings visibility on him though, what makes him more tribal and paranoid, especially after a fellow activist is arrested by the immigration police and executed on made-up charges. As this happens, he loses his struggle with his feelings and falls in love, but the effects of the fellow activist’s tragedy on his family becomes a warning for him of the price his girlfriend might have to pay. He finally finds support in a senator also interested in blocking the presidential aspirations of the antagonist, but the immigration police is already circling around him and his friends, what will push him to a fatal decision when they ambush him.

Groul Guff:

Backstory: Similarly to Gatito, he finds his diploma in architecture won’t give him any opportunity in the Northern State’s caste society, so he emigrates to Nayak only to find the xenophobia promoted by the antagonist rising. He’s also marked by the trauma of an immigration crackdown a friend of his could not escape.

Traits: Extroverted; loyal to Gatito even though he doubts of their real chances of success. He always seems in a good mood but turns dark after a traumatic event that breaks his optimistic surface when a decision of his causes the deportation of two of his friends and he ends up killing the gang leader who deceived him.

Arc: He emigrates from Northern State, survives an immigration crackdown and meets Gatito. He cheers up Gatito in his moments of doubt and helps him organize his group. But when, after the gangs betrayed him in a deal he supports to bring back two deported friends, costing the lives of two more of his friends, he kills the gang leader who set him up and starts getting dark. His confidence is broken and he seems to be seeking redemption from then on. He finally redeems himself when the immigration police finally cracks on Gatito’s group and he gives his life to slow down their persecutors.

Rachy Corry:

Backstory: The daughter of a shopkeeper and a social worker, she meets Gatito when his ‘ronda’ beats the gang that is about to assault her.

Traits: Extroverted, she is invested on what she believes and is willing to take risks. She lives denying reality though and she is deeply affected by Gatito’s death until the magical moment that reconciles her with life in the final scene.

Arc: She is attracted to Gatito but resists his overprotective attitude. She wants to love him despite his dangerous life. Gatito’s death embitters her (showing she had overestimated her own strength) though until an epiphany starts to heal her heart.

Michelle Tancruarf:

Backstory: He is moved by old resentments towards races he considers inferior and one day finds his chance to raise to a position of power in the conservative Patriot Party with a demagogic xenophobic message.

Traits: Intelligent and insecure but manipulative and without scruples, he’s moved by his prejudices and ambitions. His private life is second priority to him. In his downfall, he loses confidence and is unwilling to pay the ultimate price, what doesn’t change his fate.

Arc: He dethrones the local leader of the Patriot Party with a xenophobic message, a risky bet that nevertheless pays and rewards his self-confidence. He manipulates his way to the Speaker and becomes mayor of Nayak. As we wants to be governor and, ultimately, president, he begins to subdue the institutions of Nayak and to normalize his cruelty against immigrants. At the end, he loses his confidence when he’s exiled and abandoned in the desert by his former minions.

  • Season Summaries

[First of all, the series was written with long episodes in mind but these can be easily broken into shorter ones if you so prefer.]

Season One sets up the rules of the world. In the first two stories, set in the past, apathetic peoples finally rises against authoritarian leaders with the help of some reluctant leader. They are part of an evolution that finally defeats totalitarianism, apathy and prejudice for good at the end of the series. The first story on this evolution is Gatito’s. At the end of his story, immigrants finally find hope and they beat the totalitarian leader but, although totalitarianism is in retreat, it hasn’t been completely defeated. The second story (in the oldest milestone), set many years before Gatito’s, is the story of The Muslim Kitty, a reluctant, shy but intelligent and good-hearted leader who challenges Ayatollah Rehal’s manipulation of religion as Rehal accumulates power in league with his accomplices in the Laic Country. Though she’s a non-violent moral leader, she’ll inspire the rebellion that overthrows the tyrannic Ayatollah. The third story, Brave, the first in the main milestone, shows the forces of totalitarianism coming back stronger than ever after having learned the lessons of the past. They secede from the Federation as a brave senator tries to stop a wave that is much stronger than him. As this happens in Nayak, the fourth story, Rebels, shows the same devolution in the neighboring Eastern State, where the Supremacist Army is trying to destroy an insurgency led, again, by a reluctant, shy leader, a school teacher who becomes an insurgent leader only after his students are ambushed and disappeared by the violent Supremacists. The evolution of this story will show the dehumanization of the insurgents as they accumulate military victories, a dehumanization the teacher will try to resist.

Season Two starts with Friends and Brother, stories of refugees who find themselves trying to survive among the insurgents, the Supremacist Army and the gangs and ends with Honesty, the story of Colonel Hower and the Honest Conservatives and of the final, political defeat of the Supremacists in Southern State. In the final scene, Colonel Hower sees in the paper the photograph of his former friend, the leader of the Supremacist insurgency who had died during the assault of the Commandos of the Northern Army to their base. Hower, who had gone through a change of heart that turned him against his former Supremacist colleague, sighs, leaves the paper, and walks to his front yard, where his son and neighbors greet him as a new day starts in Southern State. This is also the story of the Supremacist insurgency in Southern State after the collapse of their regime.

In Season Three, the main story, the story of the Civil War (General Gatito), starts. All these stories will converge in the story of General Tumiau Gatito, an undocumented immigrant who joins the Northern Army with fake papers, rises in their army to the rank of General of the Army and finally finds a way to destroy the totalitarianism for good both in the battlefield (The Civil War is the climax of the series) and in civilian life. The season ends with something that had never happened before in Northern State: the once apathetic, demoralized soldiers protest, yell Gatito’s name and refuse to leave the yard despite the punishment, the threats and the rain when the aristocrats want to give the credit for Private Gatito’s capture of a warlord to a cowardly aristocratic officer.

Season Four, first part, ends with the epic Battle of Virginia, in which, against all odds, General Gatito’s ragtag army stops the Northern Army Group of the Supremacist Army. Season Four, second part, is the story of the war as lived by leaders and common people. It ends with, after all the other stories find their own conclusions, with Gatito coming back from death for his wife so they can have a second chance after the life they couldn’t have because of the war. As he leaves with her, the audience will be able to pan the room, from her dead body covered by the cape nobody saw again after the day Gatito died in the battlefield to the photograph she took of him the day they met, moment in which the photograph turns into a painting to symbolize the moment in which, to reward the evolution made by the people of the Federation, magic and reality start to mix. See appendix for a more detailed summary of the other four seasons.

And yes, this is not a traditional lineal structure, but it also describes a historic evolution that makes, in fiction, possible what we haven’t been able to achieve in real life. Different from other stories, the ending shows not only changes in the lives of the protagonists but also in the lives of the people of the Federation. At the end of this evolution, life and magic meet and even death is defeated. Even the devil finds redemption, as in the Yazidi mythology. Imagine Game of Thrones but with an evolution relevant for the lives of the average Joe. And an epic historic evolution looks more convincing in historic milestones than forcing it into a single one, so I placed three stories in times different from the main milestone, leaving the rest in the main one. Are we not, after all, complaining all the time that we don’t learn the lessons of history? In this evolution, we do and even nature rewards us for that.

  • Potential Episodes

Though they can be broken into shorter episodes, the first one sets up the characters and their challenges as well as how the antagonist’s plans are mercilessly implemented. As the antagonist is elected mayor, the little safety and hopes of our heroes vanish. The episode starts with the brutal scene of an immigration crackdown and ends with Gatito being unable to help two of his guys, who have been deported, to come back due to the changes brought by the ascent of Tancruarf. Tancruarf’s effect in their lives is now real.

The second episode shows Gatito overcoming the initial setbacks and gaining the hearts and minds of the people of Miyaff after his group starts expelling the gangs, so showing the people of Miyaff what is possible when they organize instead of accepting gang abuse as part of the status quo. Now they finally have the numbers to do something to slow the antagonist’s momentum and they are starting to succeed when in a neighboring tragedy falls over Miac, a fellow activist who is caught by the immigration policy, showing Gatito what can happen to his girlfriend, the only personal solace in his life. The second episode ends with a broken Giselle (Miac’s wife) leaving Gatito’s warehouse with her son before the execution of the activist Miac. Gatito sees instead a broken Rachy leaving after his own arrest. The antagonist is now governor. Gatito realizes sooner or later he will be a target.

The third episode shows the final conflict: Gatito has been able to deflate the antagonist’s presidential ambitions but the immigration police circle starts getting closer around his group. Ambushed in Freedom Plaza, Gatito will prefer death to surrender. As his girlfriend Rachy finds his body and hugs it, the people of Nayak finally will feel her pain. This encourages honest liberals and conservatives to stand up against the antagonist by calling for an investigative commission on the governor’s crimes, so pushing him to illegally adjourn a session of Congress that is voting on the commission, what brings his downfall as the army sides with Congress. Gatito’s former ally in Congress brings to life his vision for immigration reform and, in the final scene, an epiphany allows Rachy to start the healing process. The forces of totalitarianism have only retreated though and will comeback in the main milestone.

What are the mini goals?

To present immigration in a completely different way and to set up an epic confrontation between democracy and totalitarianism, whose destructive evolution becomes increasingly dangerous from the milestones of the Muslim Kitty and Gatito Inmeegrante’s to the main milestone, where the final confrontation takes place. The cliffhanger to the second season is the ending of the story of the Rebels from Eastern State after Brave shows us a similar development in Nayak.

The main milestone will show us the story of Tumiau Gatito, who rises among the soldiers to become an officer and to inspire the people of Northern State to stand up to the Supremacists of Southern State. Gatito, now General of the Army, changes the culture of the army just in time to stop the advance of the Supremacist Army and sets the plan that will destroy the Supremacists both in the battlefield and in the hearts and minds of the people.


Appendix

Gatito Inmeegrante, the pilot, is one of fourteen stories and is representative of the rest of the work, so if you like it and see in it a promising bet, you may rest assured that you have enough stories of the same quality and style, in the same universe, to cover at least four seasons. All the stories are already written (though only the first season -Gatito Inmeegrante, The Muslim Kitty, Brave, Rebels- is fully edited) and available to any filmmaker or producer seriously interested in this project.

First Season:

In Gatito Inmeegrante, Gatito Migran, against impossible odds, will try to solve the problem of his legal status, on which his life and dreams depend. With the state of Nayak falling to authoritarian and xenophobic temptations in the background, and determined to live, to not just survive, the protagonist will struggle with rejections, persecution and his own frustrations, all in the hope of finding the oasis where he and his friends can afford the dreams and love from which their legal status excludes them. At the end, when he is closer than ever to succeed, finally in the radar of his foes, he will face the ultimate test to his character.

The second story, The Muslim Kitty, taking place in the first milestone, is a story about religion put at the service of an authoritarian regime and how it is manipulated by a corrupt status. On the opposite side of this regime, the Muslim Kitty will challenge it with the only weapon she has: her moral convictions. The story evolves along the struggles of the Muslim Kitty and the events leading to the fall of the Great Ayatollah’s rule. Some of these events will be defined from the point of view of both the victims and a terrorist.

The third story, Brave, takes place in the third, main milestone. Taking place many years after the story of Gatito Inmeegrante, Brave is the story of a senator trying to prevent a new decomposition of Nayak’s political system, which will end up in a coup against its weak liberal governor. At the end, Senator Kenneymeow will be put to the ultimate test as the tentacles of the Supremacist Party begin to destroy his country, his party and his family.

The fifth story, Rebels, shows the story of an insurgency in Eastern State after the same fascist trends affecting Nayak extend to eastwards. The story shows the evolution of this insurgency, its demise, and its legacy to the main fight to come in Northern State. From the Teacher, longing for an elusive negotiated peace, to Aarf displacing the Teacher as he is legitimated by his military victories, to Guaron taking the surviving Rebels to Northern State when everything seems lost, Rebels is another unique story that addresses the issue of insurgencies using the unlearned lessons of counterinsurgency history.

Second Season:

The fifth story, Friends, is a story of refugees escaping the paramilitary from Eastern State and the story of two unlikely friends who will find in these refugees a reason to continue living. It’s the first story showing us the times of the Great War. Forsythe, a dog with a mysterious, tragic past; Flower, an idealistic young cat who finds in a teaching offer a way to escape the city where her activism has brought her more problems than she needs. Their story will give the concept of friendship not a new meaning but actually a forgotten one.

The sixth story, Brother, is a continuation of Friends. Here Bob Jr., a child from the war, will help the children escaping the Nayak refugee camp to survive while the war lasts. With the Supremacist regime collapsing in Eastern State in the background, Bob Jr. will find in his way a local insurgency hunting down a war criminal. But he will also find Milo, a somewhat weird child of the war. Bob Jr. will resist feeling attached to Milo because if he has learned something from the war it’s that love hurts. Thus, as he travels through a chaotic Eastern State, Bob Jr. will engage reluctantly in a journey into his own soul, a journey where he will be more afraid of the challenges to his own heart than of the retreating Supremacist soldiers or the paramilitary.

The seventh story, Madam Death, is the story of a collaborator, a war criminal, from her unfortunate childhood to the day of her execution. Madam Death is both a villain and a victim in a town marked by more than one sin. Madam Death is also a moral dilemma were the lines continually blur and the concepts of free will or even redemption lose their meaning.

The eighth story, Honesty, is the story of a Supremacist Army colonel returning to Southern State after the war only to find that the Northern State Army, the army of occupation, has saved his son. As his neighbors share with him their rage at what is progressively exposed as the lies of the fallen Supremacist regime, and as he tries to make amendments for his own sins, this colonel will found a new movement to rescue conservatism from the corruption of the old Supremacists, who are now regrouping under a new party. With the birth of the Honest Conservatives, the story of his own redemption will also start. The violent Supremacist Militia will make of this a difficult task though.



Third Season:

The ninth story, Home, is the story of an agricultural engineer, the war hero who kept the armies of Northern State running on full bellies by modernizing Northern State’s agriculture during the war. The death of his wife during the war embitters him though. And the residuals of the old aristocracy remaining in Northern State won’t make his mourning easier. Thus, as he starts what should have been a veiled suicide attempt, a trip to the lawless Country of the Jungle Animals, a violent banana republic, he will find himself reluctantly accompanied by his best friend and by some of his students. Yet, even in this new country he will find himself surrounded by political intrigues aimed at overthrowing the king protecting his research and his new life. Nevertheless, at the end of this journey, and after a coup attempt against the king is violently suffocated, the protagonist will find that he has finally arrived to the place where he belonged, that he is finally home.

The tenth story, My Town, is a high-school love story taking place in a town still heavily supportive of the defeated Supremacists. The protagonist, the son of a hardcore Supremacist, falls in love with the daughter of a returning displaced refugee. This can’t end up well. And it doesn’t. At the end, the protagonist, as much as he loves his bigoted father, will have to decide whether he is willing to pay the price to do what is right.

The eleventh story, Lizzy, is the story of a middle-age professor unexpectedly finding herself in the middle of the movement that, using General Gatito as symbol, will defend Gatito’s political legacy from the intrigues of the old aristocrats of Northern State. Some of the backlogs of the old aristocracy have even laundered money for the desperate financial backers of the Supremacist Party of Southern State and, as they regroup, these aristocrats will try to destroy her reputation and regain their lost power. To fight back, a journalist will have to reengage with his problematic past in a dangerous trip. But Lizzy is also a story about the collective response from the people of Northern State to that old aristocracy.

The twelfth story, Fighter, shows the most recent milestone in this historic evolution to a more idyllic society where animals, environment and magic can finally meet. The protagonist, an initially uncommitted MMA fighter, will have to face a series of challenges in his journey to a prizefight with an angry antagonist. And though this will make sense at the end of the whole series, like in the Yazidi beliefs, even the devil can be redeemed at the end. In the series, probably this story has been placed in the third season.

Fourth Season:

The thirteenth story, General Gatito, which is the turning point of this milestone starts in the third season and develops during the fourth season, is the story leading to the surge and collapse of the Supremacists of Southern State and to the Great War, the civil war. A refugee escaping the militias of Southern State, Tumiau Gatito will use fake papers to enroll in the Northern State Army. After a difficult journey, made even more difficult due to the way the aristocratic class of Northern State rules the army, Gatito will become an officer and will give the soldiers, whose life he still shares, something to claim as their own. But, as his prestige grows among the soldiers, Gatito will find some protectors, especially in the new president Aarf. And it will be President Aarf who will give Gatito the chance of leading a disorganized, demoralized army just as the Supremacist Army is crossing the border into Northern State. General Gatito is the story of Gatito’s leadership and how its legacy leads to the destruction of both the Supremacist Army and the Supremacist Party. It’s also the story of the people of Northern State claiming for themselves a government they had always seen before as something alien, something that naturally belonged to the local aristocrats. And a very special ending will make this story very difficult to forget.

Doggy, the fourteenth story, is the story of the military campaigns to expel the Supremacists from both Eastern State and Nayak. It’s also the story of General Doggy, General Gatito’s successor, coming to terms with the big shadow of his predecessor. These two last stories are the stories about the Great War and will give you the opportunity to present epic battles like the Battle of Virginia and the Battle of Guaguin. The military campaigns are mostly based on actual military history, what will make them especially intense, leaving nothing to envy to other productions.

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