Money is hidden in a room of the "Red October" factory. All the heroes of the film are trying to get hold of this money. As in today's Russia, money is the only value. At least that's what our youth believes, this generation that grew up with capitalism, in a time of spiritual emptiness where communist ideology has collapsed and where the Orthodox religion has not yet occupied the place left vacant. In a country where "everything is possible, you just have to allow yourself everything". That is to say, abolish the last moral barriers that hinder the frantic race for money. This film is aimed primarily at young people, at our children for whom life is increasingly turning into a video game. Lisa, the heroine of the film, is a child-woman, one of those we call nymphets. She finds herself involved by chance in a chase to get hold of a large sum of money. She has fallen "into the game of others". But, "going through all the stages", she alone pockets the money. And she adopts the simplistic philosophy of her rival, Khroust, the murderer and sadist: "Everything is possible, you just have to allow yourself everything". The film belongs to the genre of black comedy with thriller elements. The language used is accessible to a young audience. It uses the commonplaces and clichés that American thrillers stuff into the heads of young people. There are extremely violent scenes which, due to this exaggerated violence, almost turn into farce. The film was deliberately conceived as an embodiment of the "new ideal of Russian youth", where the main character understands after a while that the real world and the virtual world are mixed in her head and that she no longer knows where the limit of what can actually be done is and what is out of bounds when "everything is possible".