"Bash and Water" by Hanan Savion and Guy Amir. Second Israeli- international series Ever on Netflix (after Hit and Run) The plot takes place in the summer of 2008, when the team had the opportunity to advance to the Champions League, and was drawn to play in the qualifiers against Wisla Krakow.

Between the two games against the Poles, there are no less dramatic things on the agenda: Finny and his partner finally manage to get pregnant, which raises questions about the possibility of continuing his wild lifestyle. Niso discovers a spot suspected to be a terminal tumor, similar to the one that killed his father at a very young age. New financial circumstances - a dramatic increase in the pub's rivals who are biting customers, bring the two to a crossroads, and Finney considers selling the pub and starting a family life in Moshav, and they try - exactly the opposite: intends to fight for the pub, to save at all costs what for him may be the only thing he leaves behind in the world. "In Fire and Water" is a very sad series about the fear of death and the crisis of masculinity at the age of 40. It's how cancer crumbles everything stable in Nissoo's world, and the possibility of a bourgeois life makes Finny reconsider everything he's known. The series is at its best when it allows its heroes to acknowledge their fears and traumas, not when they go to battle with the Jerusalem scarf seller who argued with them about the location of the tables of the bar next to her store. In doing so, it joins a wave of series and films of various kinds that deal with the relationship of the third and fourth generations to the Holocaust and have flooded the screens in recent years, such as "Berlin Blues," "As long as in the heart" and the documentary "Journey to Poland."