In a nearly empty hotel, a veteran receptionist grows suspicious of a nervous guest whose behavior seems evasive. Ignoring his manager’s warnings, he confronts the man, convinced he is hiding something dangerous. When the tension finally breaks, the guest unexpectedly confesses to a crime—revealing that the real weight he carries is not guilt alone, but the unbearable feeling of being constantly watched.
Karel takes care of his mother while a stream of water flows between them. Although they cannot see it, it fills them with solace.
After his wife leaves him, Josef takes his young son Samuel to a remote countryside camp in an attempt to hold things together. As Samuel clings to memories of his mother, an unsettling caretaker disrupts their fragile refuge. At dawn, a sudden act of violence shatters the illusion of safety, forcing father and son to confront the raw weight of loss.
An uncomfortable encounter between family members turns cruel when one of them asks for help. The terms of a loan between them reveal human nature in its rawest form and rise beyond what appears at first glance.