Plot:
"My mother taught me to speak, why should I be silent?" Her grandmother passed away, the elevator in her house broke down, and carrying the coffin to the street made everyone embarrassed. This is the daily life of the black girl Habby. Her white doctor neighbor, who was newly elected as the district mayor, "genuinely" took in Syrian refugees, but ignored the plight of the black community who had lived there for many years, and ruthlessly pushed for a forced eviction order, forcing Habby to take the road of resistance on Christmas, which should have been a time of universal joy. As oppression becomes more and more unreasonable, will the anger of residents get out of control? Following the Cannes award-winning film "Les Miserables", Richard Lee once again explores the root causes of class and racial conflicts in French society: it is not the scarcity that is worrying, but the inequality; it is not the poverty that is worrying, but the instability. It is true.