VICTORIA Scrapbooking is hard, guys.

ITโ€™S 1979 in Sofia, Bulgaria. Boryana (Irmena Chichikova) lives with her husband and mother in a cramped apartment, consumed by her desire to leave the Soviet country for the West. In her rare moments of privacy, she indulges in a contraband bottle of Coke, cigarettes (lit with a novelty Statue of Liberty lighter), and (unbeknownst to her husband) old-fashioned birth control.

But despite her best efforts, Boryana becomes pregnant. Sheโ€™s now trapped not just by the state and her Stalin-loving, ever-disapproving mother, but by her own body.

Nine months later, she gives birth to a healthy baby girlโ€”who has no belly button. The child, Viktoria, is instantly hailed as a national miracle and turned into a symbol of Soviet strength and potential, all but crushing any chance Boryana had of leaving the country. And by age nine, Viktoria is a little tyrant, spoiled by the Socialist head of state. Her grandmother couldnโ€™t be prouder. Boryana makes no effort to conceal her disgust. But with communismโ€™s collapse in 1989, family dynamics shift once more.

Writer/director Maya Vitkovaโ€™s debut premiered at Sundance in 2014, the first Bulgarian film to do so, and Vitkova captures the private moments of women that are rarely acknowledged, let alone shown in movies: the squicky sounds of Boryanaโ€™s abject douching echoing off the bathroom walls; her water breaking and slowly dripping off the hem of her dress; her pregnant body in a bath, blood blooming slowly from between her legs. These scenes are intimate and thoroughly unsensationalized, shot with a reverence sorely missing from most films.

Viktoriaโ€™s missing belly button and her Socialist-sponsored pampering is a necessary and well-executed absurdist interlude in what would otherwise be a bleak portrait of domestic strife and intergenerational resentment. Meditative, wry, and intensely unsentimental toward motherhood, Viktoria still ends with a bittersweet message of ambition and reconciliation.