

Loafing and Camouflage is a 1984 Greek live-action comedy film directed by Nikos Perakis. The film was followed by Living Dangerously, released in 1987. The Loafing and Camouflage franchise was revisited in the early 2000s with the films Sirens in the Aegean (2005), I-4: Loafing and Camouflage (2008) and Loafing and Camouflage: Sirens at Land (2011).

A group of Greek soldiers are assigned to run the Cinematographic Unit of the army in the midst of political unrest.

On the morning of the World Cup final, Karamanos, an employee of the Greek Telecommunications Organization (TOE), connects his commander's personal computer to a devilishly complex and explosive device. He threatens to blow up the floor and the satellite dishes above if he is not allowed to appear on the national network 10 minutes before the football match to denounce all the wrongs that plague the lives of Greek citizens and make them victims of a partisan and corrupt state.

A group of Greek solders, who serve their military service in Kos, is sent to guard the skerry of Pitta. Everything looked normal until a Turkish boat disembarks 4 castaways on Pitta.

A group of new recruits, each of whom, for their own reasons, wants to be exempted from military service, is forced to serve as I4. The group finds itself on a remote island with a specific mission: they must play the role of "hares" and coexist with the locals who are preparing for a major exercise.

Seven years after the incident on the Pitta islet, the team leaves the Aegean and goes ashore to help Stavromathiakakis find little Noori, who is about to be deported.