This medieval story, with its extraordinary pictorial evocation power, tells us about the place of our wildest instincts, and also of our families, of what is transmitted there, the strength of the dreams of the parents, the weight of their secrets.... Flaubert portrays a conjunction of sophistication and bestiality that reminds us of our present, of our uncontrollable consumption of natural resources, of the urgency of a radical bifurcation of our path to civilization, to our powerlessness in the face of the curse of predictable disasters. To share this feeling, we create a nomadic and ambulatory form, which plunges the viewer where he can question the relationship of man to nature: forests, gardens, ruins gained by vegetation, places of worship, banks of rivers...