Costache Nicolau is a seedy old beggar who wanders around Bucharest. Once a day he eats at a charity shelter, and at night sleeps in a squalid apartment. He is a former political prisoner who spent 40 years in Siberia. A young TV reporter, interested in his story, would like to shoot a programme about him. How did he return home from exile? Why won’t he speak about his family? Why do they call him The Pharaoh? The reporter who seeks the answer to this question herself becomes part of a documentary testimony about contemporary Romania which is now passing through a process of social transformation. “It’s also a film about her, a fairly normal and ordinary girl, and about her first taste of discovery”, says director Sinisa Dragin, who received the Main Prize at the Oberhausen film festival for his first documentary as writer-director, entitled The Sorrow of Black Gold. “Will she learn something from it? Will she start looking at the world through different eyes? The small mysteries which she gradually unveils are only the surface of the great mystery of this world...”