Jean-Claude is a world weary older man whose days are spent in the thankless job of “hussier de justice” (the French equivalent of a bailiff), delivering paperwork to people facing eviction or seizure of their possessions. He took over the business from his father, a brusque fault finding widower who tries the patience of the care workers in the rest home where his son dutifully visits him each Sunday.
Across the street from Jean-Claude's office is a dance studio, and he decides to shake himself out of his dreary, stultifying rut by enrolling for tango lessons. There he is approached by a woman who tells him that his mother was her babysitter when she was a child. She is learning to dance in preparation for her wedding, but both she and Jean-Claude seem to share a longing for something more in their lives. A tentative bond develops, but each is justifiably cautious.