- Premier Anton Rojek, the anti-Western head of an East Bloc state, plans to hold a "youth congress," hoping to get the young people of his country to endorse his repressive regime. The IMF's plan to prevent this involves the talents of folk singer Roxy, as well as having Paris pose as the missing son of the country's late President, Eduard Malik, whom many young people there still idolize.—aldanoli
- Youth, music and the return of a political idol's "son" help the IMF bring down yet another dictator. Paris plays the wide-eyed "pawn" in the dictator's plan, which the IMF foils using a quick change of loyalty and a last-minute denunciation by the young "idol's" mother. Too bad Leonard Nimoy isn't younger and the girl who sings the iconic "The Times They Are A-Changin'" isn't better.
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