This unconventional situational docu-portrait tells about the complicated personal universe of Jože Ráž - the leader of the historically most popular "Czechoslovak" pop-rock band Elán. It is a cinematic encounter with a Christian Buddhist believer in communism. The portrait was ten years in the making and is filmed in unexpected places and in open situations that make visible the constellations of Raze's life: cocoa and whisky, music and family, dictatorship and meditation, the moment and eternity, God and nothingness, or good and evil in the form of Smurf and Gargamel, for example. "I approach him as a personality who has reached several Czech and Slovak generations within Elan and has the ability to unite through his work, but who at the same time, through his public speeches, has long divided society and even repelled a part of it." The filmmaker has given in to a budding friendship, and his viewpoint has the ambition to uncover Ráza's civil metaphysics, his "natural ability to live in a universe with God."