On a cold January morning in 1942, a group of high-ranking Nazi officials gathers at a luxurious villa in the suburbs of Berlin, under the guise of a social retreat. However, the atmosphere quickly turns tense when the true purpose of the meeting is revealed: to discuss the "Final Solution," a sinister plan to carry out the genocide of millions of Jews in Europe. As the most powerful men of the German regime share their visions and strategies, intense debates arise over the efficiency, morality, and logistics of this horrific operation.
Among them is Reinhard Heydrich, a fervent promoter of the Third Reich, whose determination and coldness even astonish his peers. As the meeting progresses, disagreements and hidden tensions emerge, reflecting the different personalities and motivations of the participants, ranging from unbridled ambition to moral doubt. The atmosphere becomes increasingly charged as the ideas grow more chilling, and the horror of what is being discussed becomes vivid.
Interacting with a script that blends theatrical tension with unsettling historical reality, the film offers a striking glimpse into how bureaucracy and hatred intertwined during one of humanity's darkest epochs. Every decision made in this meeting becomes a key piece in the machinery of a plan that will irrevocably change the course of history.