A remembrance of love in a time of war. 92-year-old Henry Budge defies
most of his family by escaping a rehab hospital to make his way to
France for the ceremonies of the 70th observance of D-Day. Before he
dies, he hopes to at last address a grief he has allowed to simmer for
decades and to rekindle memories of Élodie Bedier, the French Resistance
fighter with whom he fell in love 70 years earlier, as a way of
confronting his grief at losing her. During his return journey, he
relives events of 1944: being wounded as he parachutes into Normandy;
falling in love with Élodie who nurses him back to health; fighting the
Germans alongside her and her resistance companions; and finally
abandoning the war to rescue a group of children from the Holocaust,
choices that leave Henry at risk of a firing squad for desertion and
Élodie vulnerable to fatal condemnation from her compatriots. When he
arrives back in France, Henry makes several shocking discoveries that
shake the very foundations of the memories he's had of Élodie all these
years and he is left to wonder about the love he has had for Élodie:
what rests on true memory vs. what is based on countless imagined
conversations over the decades?