Twenty years ago, a busload of unknown Scottish musicians travelled to France to play at a music festival. They went on to become some of the biggest names in the music business, reports BBC News.
Their link was the cult Glasgow-based record label Chemikal Underground, founded by indie rock band The Delgados.
In 1997, the band was joined by Mogwai, Arab Strap, Bis and a pre-Franz Ferdinand Alex Kapranos on a road trip to the small French town of Mauron in Brittany.
They did not realise at the time, but they were on the cusp of a success which would still be generating interest two decades later.
Lost in France is a documentary from Irish director Niall McCann, who had the idea of getting the bands back together to revisit the place and the memories of Mauron and the mid-90s music scene.
He says he thought the story could be told as a statement on what has happened to the music industry over the past 20 years.
The idea came about when McCann got to know Arab Strap singer Aidan Moffat after a gig in Dublin in 2012.
He later spent the day with Moffat in Glasgow and the musician mentioned "a mental trip they all took in 1997 when they were all starting out".
McCann says: "From examining that tiny moment you can tell the bigger story.
"Mauron is a way in and the trip back is important as a device to get the guys talking."
McCann says the musicians are all "quite self-deprecating".
He says: "It became clear to me that in order to get them to reflect on Glasgow and the music scene and their lives I'd need to take them out of Glasgow."
Arab Strap's Aidan Moffat could not make the trip to France because he was involved in his own film project at the time, but McCann says he got everyone else he wanted.
This was despite others, such as Emma Pollock, co-founder of Chemikal Underground, being initially sceptical about the idea.
She says: "When you are in the eye of the storm you do not necessarily appreciate that there is a story to tell.
"I think that we have always thought it is enough the records exist. They are the legacy of Glasgow's music.
"But Niall said to us there was a story about the people who made the music and where it came from."