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Viktoria (Bulgarian: ) is a 2014 Bulgarian-Romanian drama film written, directed and

produced by Maya Vitkova.[1][2] The film premiered in-competition in the World Cinema Dramatic
Competition at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 19, 2014.[3][4]
On January 26, it premiered at 2014 International Film Festival Rotterdam.[5][6][7] The film later
screened at the 2014 Gteborg International Film Festival.[8]

Plot[edit]
On 10 November, 1979 - 10 years before the collapse of Communism in Europe, Boryana is
determined not to give birth to a child in Communist Bulgaria. The only thing Boryana longs for is
to escape to the West. But despite her attempt to protect herself from unwanted pregnancy, her
baby survives... Unwanted, Viktoria is born with no umbilical cord to connect her to her mother
and thus proclaimed "the baby of the decade". Viktoria becomes a symbol of Communist
Bulgaria. While growing up, she dominates her environment and is at subconscious war with her
mother - the one who didn't want her. But on 10 November, 1989, when the political situation
collapses, turning Viktoria's life upside down, the hardships of the new time bind her and her
mother together.

Cast[edit]
Irmena Chichikova as Boryana
Daria Vitkova as Viktoria (9-year-old)
Kalina Vitkova as Viktoria (teenager)
Mariana Krumova as Dima
Dimo Dimov as Ivan
Georgi Spasov as Todor Zhivkov
Svetoslav Draganov as Sando
Simeon Tsolov as Stefcho (9-year-old)
Ivo Karamanski as Stefcho (teenager)
Katerina Angelova as Baby Viktoria

Reception[edit]
Viktoria received mostly positive reviews upon its premiere at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival.
Dennis Harvey of Variety said in his review that "Viktorias first hundred minutes or so offer an
arresting mix of satire, surrealism and ambivalently angsty drama, with the helmer in precocious
full command of pacing, tone and aesthetics."[9] Boyd van Hoeij in his review for The Hollywood
Reporter called it "A striking first film about a young child without a belly button that explores the
relationship of Bulgarians with their country, history and families."[10]
Emma Myers of Indiewire graded the film B+ and praised the performances of Chichikova and
Kalina Vitkova by saying that "Kalina Vitkova, whose big brown eyes communicate a great deal
of pain and longing. But it's Irmena Chichikova as Boryana who steals the screen. With deep set
eyes and razor sharp cheek bones that recall Charlotte Rampling in her heyday, shes not only
striking to look at but subtly expressive. Though she puts on a stoic front, her final scene hints at
the deep and invisible motivations of her character."[11]

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