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Director's Statement
The blossoming of Marie through the confrontation with another culture during a period of crisis, makes The Aviatrix of Kazbek into a heart-warming plea for fantasy as a weapon against terror. The encounter of two completely different cultures in The Aviatrix of Kazbek is a recognisable and contemporary subject; initial distrust towards the unknown, but eventual recognition and even appreciation of something new. This meeting between cultures leads to conflict and reconciliation, to misunderstandings and friendship; to tragic but sometimes also comic situations. The pressure that the horrors of war put on common people, is unfortunately also a contemporary subject. Whether it is applied to the situation in Iraq, Afghanistan, the (civil) wars in Georgia, or the Second World War, relations and positions within a society are sharpened. Who is good, who is bad, but also who are the silent conformists? Such a community under the pressure of war is the backdrop of our story, and our heroine is actually just trying to escape that reality by dreaming.