In a quiet moment earlier in the film, Amelia questions Viktor about who he is and why he came to America. Viktor reveals that the Planters can contains a copy of the famous "A Great Day In Harlem" photograph of 57 jazz musicians that was published in Esquire magazine. Viktor's father was a jazz fan, and he was collecting autographs from each of the musicians pictured in the photo. Unfortunately, he died before he could get the signature of the last name on his list: jazz saxophonist Benny Golson. Viktor came to New York to finish what his father started.
Nine months later, when the war in Krakozhia ends, Viktor has the opportunity to go home. However, in the film's final scene, Viktor is about to leave the airport but is stopped at the door by a cadre of security officers, whom Dixon orders to arrest Viktor. Instead, they let him go, allowing him to escape the airport by taxi and find Golson at a hotel in the city. Viktor obtains the autograph, then hails a taxi and informs the driver simply, "I am going home."