Walid, an overweight Lebanese man, is caught in a destructive spiral. He works at his uncle's tennis club but is sent away to build a tennis court. His encounters with Laith and Maya, with whom Walid shares more than he thinks, lead him to find the path back towards hope.
Walid, an overweight Lebanese man, has been caught in a destructive spiral since teenagehood. Despite his brilliant and educated mind, he is alone and unhappy. In Beirut, Walid is the handyman at his uncle's very posh tennis club. They regularly clash because of the grumpy attitude Walid adopts in all circumstances. Maya, a French humanitarian worker, arrives at the tennis club to ask for help. In the Syrian refugee camp in the Bekaa Valley that she supervises, she wants to build a tennis court and train the children there to help them overcome their war trauma. Walid's uncle sees this as the perfect opportunity to send him away from the condemnatory looks of the bourgeois customers.
Despite his reluctance, Walid has little choice and must resolve to take the road towards the camp. His comings and goings between Beirut and the Bekaa intensify, giving rise to different encounters that encourage him to surpass himself. The caring confrontation with a psychologist, an unexpected budding love with Maya, and the bonds he forms with Laith, a young Syrian refugee very much affected by the war, gradually lead Walid to confront his own trauma and finally reconnect with himself.
Despite his reluctance, Walid has little choice and must resolve to take the road towards the camp. His comings and goings between Beirut and the Bekaa intensify, giving rise to different encounters that encourage him to surpass himself. The caring confrontation with a psychologist, an unexpected budding love with Maya, and the bonds he forms with Laith, a young Syrian refugee very much affected by the war, gradually lead Walid to confront his own trauma and finally reconnect with himself.