
The trauma is so great for Camille that she develops what appears to be a psychological allergy to alcohol.

At first the young Camille loves the ritual, but it soon turns sour and overly intense when she can’t identify a scent. We learn early on that Camille (a wonderful Fleur Geffrier) and her father have been estranged for many years, and the time they spent together was often spent going through a series of blindfolded smell tests of all the individual ingredients in wine. Manon Maindivide and Stanley Weber as young Camille and Alexandre in ‘Drops of God’ After his death, Iseii (the student) and Camille (the daughter) are charged with going through a series of wine-based contests, with the winner taking both the wine collection and the entirety of the old man’s estate. An old, bitter man named Alexander (Stanley Weber, giving Brian Cox a run for his Succession money in terms of playing toxic fathers), who has devoted his life to collecting the most valuable wine collection in the world, sets up a competition in his will between his most prized student and his daughter.

The concept of Drops of God (created by Quoc Dang Tran) is both simple and compelling. Download: Drops of God: The Best (and Most Unsung) New Show of the Year So Far
