In the aftermath of World War II, a young Red Cross doctor named Mathilde (Lou de Laâge, Breathe, The Wait) is treating the last of the French survivors of the German prison camps. One night, she is approached by a frantic Benedictine nun who begs Mathilde to follow her back to the convent. Once there the nun reveals that one of her sisters is about to give birth and several others are in advanced stages of pregnancy as a result of a savage mass sexual assault by Russian soldiers. Though a nonbeliever, Mathilde agrees to stay on and tend to the rest of the convent, and in doing so becomes entangled in their fiercely private world. Fearing the shame of exposure, the hostility of the new anti-Catholic Communist government, and facing an unprecedented crisis of faith, the nuns increasingly turn to Mathilde as their belief and traditions clash with the harsh realities and atrocities of war. This most recent film from acclaimed director Anne Fontaine (Coco Before Chanel, Adore) is a restrained, chilling, and incredibly powerful look at the limits of faith in the face of immense tragedy.