Victor, a disillusioned 60-something whose marriage is on the rocks, opts to relive the week of his life when, 40 years earlier, he met his true love through a company that allows customers to return to the time period of their choosing.
Victor, a disillusioned sexagenarian, sees his life turned upside down on the day when Antoine, a brilliant entrepreneur, offers him a new kind of attraction: mixing theatrical artifices and historical reconstruction, this company offers his clients a chance to dive back into the era of their choice. Victor then chose to relive the most memorable week of his life: the one where, 40 years earlier, he met the great love.—Pathé
Aging Victor is down on his luck: he's unemployed and he has been kicked out of his own home as his wife has left him for his former boss, the man who fired him. Then he is offered a chance to recreate a moment in time and he chooses the moment in 1974 when he and his wife first met.—grantss
Sadly, Victor, an unemployed sixty-year-old cartoonist, feels that his marriage is failing. Having admitted that things cannot be improved, sad-eyed Victor seems to have come to terms with the course of events, while his wife, Marianne, is bent on having a blast, with or without him. Then, Antoine, a young screenwriter and owner of a company that stages historical re-enactments with pinpoint accuracy, offers Victor a unique form of time travel. Now, with the help of his expertise, Victor can relive the most important day of his life: the day he met the love of his life at the cosy La Belle Époque café in Lyon, four long decades earlier. Indeed, things were much simpler back then; however, can Victor rewrite people exactly as he would like them to stay?—Nick Riganas