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Director's Statement
− Two Parts Make a Whole − THE WOMAN WHO BRUSHED OFF HER TEARS is a film in search of humanity. The story told is of people out of place, of individuals who defy their society’s chains in the attempt to free themselves. The two parts of the film − France and Macedonia – are interdependent. They complete the puzzle and hold together the essence of the story of two very different women. The Macedonian part of the story is inspired by the Flaherty documentary approach, where ethnicity is not a novelty or a spectacle. By careful observation of everyday tasks, the true nature of characters is revealed. Visually, the entirely directional/interior treatment of the French part contrasts with the poetic observational treatment of the Macedonian part in order to create a hybrid of the two. It was definitely a challenge to tell two stories and make them feel as one. Helena’s story was always about emotion, while Ajsun’s was more about action. Even when Helena takes action, she does it in the name of both women. This idea helped me throughout the writing as if I was dealing with one character and not two. From the beginning I knew that the two stories would be complete opposites in all possible ways: visually, but, even more importantly, in philosophy, in the way the two women view the world. In a way, I am referring to myself, these two parts of me: a Macedonian woman now living in the West.