The story begins after the struggle. What mark does an extraordinary revolt leave on those who experienced it?
The impact of an event can be heard through a progressive score played over time. By following the intersecting paths of the Yellow Vests for several years after the movement, the film examines the evolution of their relationship to the world, politics, violence, otherness, and social boundaries.
The struggle also leaves deeper marks that sometimes disrupt and sometimes liberate, revealing themselves in relationships at work, with family, in speech, and with oneself.
In echoing this, a historian and a sociologist draw parallels between these traces and those of other movements that have marked history, such as the Paris Commune and the Spanish Indignados.
Through intimate and collective journeys, the film questions the extent to which social struggles can transform us and become emancipatory.


