This is sequel of the adaptation of the famous satiric tale of well-intending soldier Schweik by Jaroslav Hasek. At the beginning of the story Lieutenant Lukas and his batman Schweik are on the way to Ceske Budejovice. Schweik together with train conductor accidentally pull the emergency brake. At the Tabor station he is asked to pay a penalty for a train delay. Some kind gentleman pays a penalty for him and gives him money for a new ticket. However, Schweik drinks the money away. Thus he must go to Budejovice on foot. On his way he gets into many grotesque situations.
David Sweat escaped the maximum security Clinton Correctional Facility on June 6, along with fellow prisoner Richard Matt. The two had been on the run for nearly three weeks when Matt was shot dead by authorities. The search for Sweat continued for another two days, when a New York State Police trooper with a keen eye noticed a man resembling Sweat walking close to the Canadian border. When the trooper, a trained firearms instructor, yelled for the man to stop, he turned and ran. The trooper realized the man was Sweat, dropped to one knee and fired his handgun, striking Sweat twice in the torso. Once in custody, Sweat began sharing with authorities key information about the great prison escape and the manhunt that followed.