Peter Perez (aka Pepi), a Viennese Holocaust survivor, and his musician friend Alfred head on a road trip across Europe in search of authentic flamenco song, armed only with their wry Viennese wit and a guitar in the trunk. Pepi wants to write his fandango, a song in a flamenco style that haunts him to this day. As a child, he and his Jewish family ended up in the Rivesaltes concentration camp in the south of France. There, Pepi was separated from his parents. He listened as the Spanish Roma children sang fandangos to communicate with their parents on the other side of the separation wall. At the age of five, Pepi could only listen. Today, a man in his mid 80s, Pepi still can't express his trauma. After driving thousands of kilometers bickering with each other like old friends do, the two old men finally arrive in the sleepy village of Paterna (Spain), where Pepi has been traveling for years in the hope of finding a key to confronting his past. As the village builds up for its yearly fiesta, Pepi tries to write his fandango. The thing is, he can't. He still can't accept what happened. Pepi has no other option but to return to Rivesaltes for the first time since he was a child, to confront the ghosts of his past which don't align with the images of the present.
—Noon Films