I watched "The World is Waiting for Us" with pleasure, and I think it is worth seeing because it is funny, and in addition, the problem it describes is real. I perceived it as a film about the young generation of slackers in Europe, where social welfare does not force people to necessarily participate in the fight for their own existence. The story is about Piotr (Sebastian Pawlak), a 30-year-old unemployed and dependent man who lives in a studio apartment in a housing estate in Katowice and is supported by his mother, who shares her pension with him. Misfortune befalls him when the local postman steals the wages with which he runs away, and his mother is forced to leave for a longer stay in a sanatorium. Left to his own devices, her son must survive an entire month on his own. This predicament leads to many of Piotr's strange ideas and funny situations. I enjoyed watching this light but not stupid film and genuinely laughed out loud several times. "The World is Waiting for Us" advantage is also good acting and realism in showing the everyday reality of Poland at that time. The main inspiration for the screenplay and film was to show some of the absurdities of reality in the Third Polish Republic. In addition, as the creator himself admitted, he drew artistic inspiration from the films of J. Jarmusch, A. Munk, and M. Forman. The film lacked the lion's claw of "Monty Python", but sometimes I thought I saw a certain kinship.