“Everything will be, Mom, everything will be.” The main character, Vaclav, or Vashek, as his fellow villagers call him, is a fool since childhood. His father, who wanted to escape with his family to France, was turned over to police and died in prison. Vashek lives with his mother. He's 40, but he's still a kid. He misses his dad, wants to be like him in everything and rejoices every time he is told "just like a father," even if it is said in reproach.
Vashek constantly promises his mother that he will repair the house. He wants to protect his mother and constantly competes with his younger brother. But being a little boy in the shower, Vashek can't sit still and just work. He likes to make fun of people, ride with local guys on a motorcycle and secretly look at the girl he loves, but who will never tell.
But for others, Vashek has long been not a child, but a 40-year-old man. They laugh at him and think he can’t even read. Everyone is tired of his antics and would only be happy to get rid of this fool.
The mother of the hero, this beautiful woman, with all the forces that she has left, fights for a normal life for her son, closes her eyes to all his oddities and treats him as a normal person. For him, he is first and foremost a son.
Frantisek, Vashek's brother, doesn't get along with him, and doesn't even try. He sees in his brother only weak-minded, causing trouble to everyone around him, especially his mother. And Frantisek himself cheats on his wife with a girl with whom his brother is in love.
Everyone in this family is difficult in their own way, and they can all be understood. Even Frantishka begins to empathize at the end of the film. It is a pity that the heroes themselves do not want to understand each other.
Since she is familiar with the work of Jiri Weidelek (" Velvet Waves, Women in Seduction, etc.) she did not expect anything good from the film and watched it solely for the sake of language. But the picture was pleasantly surprised, and I can not believe that the director is Mr. Weidelek. Perhaps all thanks to writer Marek Epstein. We can’t help but thank the actors for their performance, especially, of course, Ivan Troyan. The film turned out to be unpretentious, in Czech original and very worthy.