Thip turns sixteen this year. She is a daughter of wealthy family and in high society. She is raised by strict and conservative rule. She meets high school football player. One day they have sex and Thip's pregnant. They decide to elope, after that her life turns upside down.
Highlights the hardships faced by a boy who works selling popsicles at the local train station and forced by economic circumstance to smuggle rice across the Thai-Malaysian border.
Tham searches for his brother Tae in order to deliver the news of their parents' passing. Tae is ordained as a monk at a temple on Don Sing Tham Island. On arrival, Tham meets Jate, the grandson of the former abbot. Jate makes hoon payon, enchanted effigies of the dead. Tham learns of a rumour that Tae vanished after murdering the abbot.
Pim has a large family with lots of relatives, most of them stick around expecting a share in the family’s will. Pim is being forced to marry someone, but she refuses and decides to move to school down south. In school she meets Alan, after a while both really fall in love with each other.
Lah is a mahout who works his elephant at an illegal logging site in Burma. When they're about to get busted, he sends his son Saeng and his elephant to relatives in Bangkok. Saeng ends up begging the streets of Bangkok with his elephant and he comes in contact with the local mafia who wants their cut or else.
Panya, a schoolboy who forms a traditional morlam band with his friends and hopes to win a prize in a provincial competition. Raenu, a girl who has a crush on him, but she faces complications when a bus carrying Bangkok students breaks down near their village and the rich city kids have to spend the night with the rural poor ones.