Danny Boyle’s Beatles-themed movie Yesterday is about to hit theaters, but a graphic novel with the same plot and title just went online for free.

By, now we’ve all seen the trailer for Danny Boyle’s upcoming movie Yesterday at least once. The premise is a fascinating one, after all. A struggling musician wakes up one day after a mysterious global blackout and finds that he is the only one who knows who the Beatles are, and he uses that music to become a star.

It’s a weirdly captivating idea for a movie, and refreshingly original, right? Judging by a graphic novel that just went online for free, it might not be as original as we once thought.

According to Variety, David Blot posted his graphic novel–also titled Yesterday — online for free. His graphic novel focuses on a young French man living in New York who has mysteriously transported back in time to the 60s, records Beatles songs before the band is formed, and becomes a star.

The similarities between the plot of the graphic novel and the Boyle movie, whose screenplay was written by Four Weddings and a Funeral and Notting Hill writer Richard Curtis, are pretty striking. However, at this point, Blot hasn’t made any comments about how closely the film resembles his graphic novel, though Variety did note that it didn’t appear that Blot sold the rights to his story either.

Instead, Blot wrote on his Facebook that his graphic novel, which was illustrated by Jérémie Royer, was meant to be part one of a story that followed his characters, John Duval and The Futurians, but the publisher Manolosanctis shuttered before he was able to publish the second volume. He wrote that he hopes this would spike the interest of a new publisher to commission the rest of the story.

At this point, Blot doesn’t seem to be taking any action against Boyle’s film, despite the striking similarities of Blot’s book and Boyle’s movie. To decide for yourself, you can download a copy of Blot’s graphic novel for free via his Dropbox link, and you can check out Boyle’s film Yesterday when it opens in movie theaters on June 28.