The conditions of life in Berlin during the nineties are more extreme and complex than in the rest of Germany. A Bosnian shopkeeper pleads for fast sex on the stairs. A real estate speculator slags the capitalism off. A trendy sixty-year-old woman is concerned about the future of her younger son. His name is Mario, is 32 years old and lives in an apartment in central Berlin. One day a few Romanians who are waiting in vain for the payment of their wages come to his house. As former neighbors, they enjoy the right to asylum in the kitchen floor. Mario doesn't take a long time to get fed up with them, so he set about planning to collect their debts. Situaciones Berlinesas is the sum of several stories, through which Zelik, with a very ironic language, does the portrait of a society in transition.