"To be completely honest, this trial does not interest me absolutely," says Max during a meeting with his lawyer.
At the end of September, this survivor of the Bataclan knows that in three weeks he will advance to the bar, a few meters from Salah Abdeslam.
The young father chose to testify during the trial of the attacks of November 13, 2015.
This music enthusiast who escaped death at the Bataclan repeats that this passage through the Courthouse in Paris, he will not get anything.
"If I'm doing it, it's for people who have lost more than me and who may need to hear that."
And then the forties would like to "leave an official, engraved mark" on his three-year-old son.
"This is the story and the reality of each person who was there that day".
Max agreed to let our cameras enter his daily life in 2016 and today.
From victim to civil party, he reveals the backstage of his time at the bar and takes the time to confide his doubts, "the ball of anguish" which rises on the day of the trial and the intense anger he felt upon discovering the faces of the accused in the box.