In a psychiatric hospital in Istanbul during the 1910s, an intriguing group of patients coexists in an environment marked by madness and the daily struggle for freedom. The plot centers around a young doctor who arrives at the institution with reformative ideals, determined to change the treatment approach toward mental illness. However, he soon discovers that the institution is not a place of healing, but rather a labyrinth of complexities and secrets.
Among the patients are peculiar characters who have been forgotten by society. Each of them has a story to tell, and as the doctor immerses himself in their lives, he realizes that madness can be more than a disease: it can be a form of resistance. The dynamics in the hospital intensify when a series of mysterious and tragic events begin to affect the inmates, leading everyone to question whether true madness lies outside the walls of the asylum.
As the young doctor confronts the harsh reality of his surroundings while simultaneously fighting for his beliefs, the lines between madness and reason blur. Struggling against a system that prioritizes control over understanding, his mission becomes an emotional journey that questions what it truly means to be sane in a world that seems to be in crisis. All of this unfolds as the reader finds themselves caught between human drama and social critique presented before their eyes.