A family grieves the death of their daughter in a suicide bombing. Meanwhile, her brother suspects she is still alive after glimpsing her in a news report and sets off to find her in the Middle East.
Tries, and sometimes succeeds, in illustrating relationships between characters through frivolous conversation, but there are bigger issues that are ignored - and instead of making the Syrian civil war universal, the show renders it generic.
Ultimately, "No Man's Land" suffers from a lack of direction. What's the point? Life during wartime makes for unexpected partnerships? That's old news.
It's distressingly incurious about the war, the country, the people who live there, the people who fight there, and even the all-important Europeans and Americans who suck up most of the oxygen in this series.