
“In the end things work out for the best, for all of us”
When a schoolteacher is sacked, he projects his bad mood at his troubled teenage son. The son, in turn, buys a CD player from a pawnshop with counterfeit money. This starts a chain reaction of misery as every victim projects his problems on to another person.
A suffocatingly bleak descent into generational despair. This film feels like a long, cold winter, where every interaction is laced with resentment and the lingering chill of alcoholism. It's a heavy, character-driven drama that offers little warmth.












