Where is the fine line between madness and hope?
Three women are in front of us: one believes she’s found her daughter, another is afraid she’s losing her child, and the third is trying to understand who she really is.
Stella is a successful forty-year-old woman. She works as a psychotherapist and lives in a beautiful house with a loving husband and a teenage son. But one day, when a young woman named Isabella comes to see her, Stella’s neat, correct life begins to fall apart. She is convinced that Isabella is in fact her daughter Alice, who disappeared many years ago under mysterious circumstances. At the time, the police concluded that little Alice drowned, but her body was never found—and Stella has always believed she is alive.
Stella sees in Isabella a striking resemblance to her daughter, but most importantly, in her heart she feels that the girl is not a stranger to her. People around her are concerned about Stella’s mental health and think an old trauma is making itself known. Meanwhile, Isabella has her own secrets and her own reasons for visiting psychotherapy sessions.
Who is lying? Who is telling the truth? Where are the hallucinations and where is reality? Only by going together with the heroes all the way to the end will we learn the answers to these questions.