A family of four members of Congress live in a high-end apartment on the left bank of Paris. The congressman's youngest daughter, Baromar (Garance Le Guillermic), who likes to see the world through the camera, is a talented philosopher under the age of 12. Unwilling to become the doomed goldfish in the fish tank, Baloma planned a birthday suicide. Honey, the hostess of the apartment (Jose Ambalasco Josiane Balasko) is a fat, ugly 54-year-old widow. She carefully maintained the vulgar image of the concierge and built a rich spiritual world for herself in the secret room. But Baromar vaguely discovered the secret, and the new Japanese gentleman Goro Ozumi (played by Toshio Igawa) was also aware of the unknown side of Honi. Under the guidance of Ozu's politeness, not only Heni gradually put off her humble disguise, Baloma also began to re-examine life and death. This film is adapted from the novel of the same name written by French woman writer Miao Li Ye Barberry.