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In France, there are more than three thousand people working as bailiffs. Evictions, seizures or debt recovery in the field, these ministerial officers recover more than eight billion euros each year and are, every day, in contact with French people on the verge of losing everything. A profession that has a very bad reputation, but a new generation of bailiffs has decided to dust off the image of their profession. Maître Julien Thiry, 34, discovered the profession in the Aix-en-Provence region (Bouches-du-Rhône). He delves daily into the private lives of French people in distress. But this young bailiff tries as much as possible to avoid conflicts in favor of mediation, like Sébastien, a father who risks losing his roof and custody of his daughter. If he does not want to be evicted, he must resume paying his rent at all costs and find a job. Maître Justine Habare, 33, has been a bailiff in the small town of Orbec (Calvados), in Normandy, for three years. High heels, impeccable hair and an English sedan, the young woman with a strong personality stands out in the profession. She manages three thousand five hundred cases per year and takes the pulse of French society every day. She has to deal with many small businesses that have gone bankrupt because of the health crisis, such as a florist whose shop she has already seized. But that's not enough, he still owes more than six thousand euros to his creditors. So to pay off the debt, she will take the last valuable asset he owns, his car. Alongside Justine, we will also discover a little-known aspect of the bailiff's profession: auctions carried out in the same way as auctioneers. In Lorraine, in Pont-à-Mousson (Meurthe-et-Moselle), Maître Benoît Jodel is a local figure. He doesn't bother much with image or method, only the result counts: he is known for not giving up and for handling his cases with an iron fist. He will try at all costs to recover the apartment of Alexandre and Marie, a couple of small owners on the verge of ruin because of unscrupulous tenants who have not paid them any rent for two years, which means an arrears of more than 10,000 euros. For Alexandre and Marie, what was supposed to ensure them a peaceful retirement turns into a nightmare. Director: Manuel Laigre