It's 1888, and Paris is drunk on its own beauty and scientific and
artistic accomplishment. The city is poised to host the Universal
Exposition, a testimony to French power and colonization, and to unveil
its extraordinary centerpiece, the Eiffel Tower.
Philippe
Normand is a modest, likable physician who, in his profession, is privy
to the foibles and addictions of the rich, the desperation of the poor,
and the egotism of his colleagues. He is a regular guest at the dinner
table of the Balise family, whose health he has cared for over many
years. He is especially close to Madou, the strong-willed youngest
daughter in the family, who is fed up with the arrogance of French
culture and the constraints it puts on women. Philippe himself is
lonely, burnt out on his profession, and disillusioned with
conventional medical science.
While attending a Wild West
show that is touring Europe, Madou is strangely drawn to the Native
American Black Elk. "Choice"—as he is known in the show—is seen as an
oddity by French society; he is a mysterious figure, poised and
uncannily intuitive, but desperately homesick. Philippe and Madou try
to help him, but it is Choice who ends up transforming the lives of all
those around him.