The film depicts the day where Yosi (73) the father of the Korman family, redeems the family dog Shula from agonized dying of numerous diseases by putting her to sleep. Should he bury her in a pet cemetery, with a dignified, but costly gravestone? Should he simply leave her in the good hands of sanitation workers? Yosi decides to take Shula's inanimate body with him and bury it in the sands, nearby home. His efforts to find partners to the burial journey are futile; Yosi's son Asaf and his girlfriend Liron (25) are busy moving boxes to a new apartment. His youngest daughter, Michal (23), works in a restaurant and can't get out of the shift. His wife Tami (56) is exhausted from the weekend's domestic chores. Yosi's ride extends as Shula's dead body rests in a cardboard box bound the rooftop of his old car. Intense forces of life, banal and mundane, interrupt the peacefulness of such a burial journey. The participants in the film (the director himself, and the members of his family) play themselves in a cinematic story based on a true event.
—Kyr Royal