[3] Later, as part of the Culture Bridges international mobility award, Nadia enrolled at the National Film and Television School (NFTS) in Beaconsfield and started an internship at the Nowness platform in London.
[7] Nadia served as the assistant director to Jonathon Narducci on the Love Me documentary produced by Powershot Production in Los Angeles.
[10] That same year in March, she pays tribute to the works of Claude LeLouch by lensing modern-day Kyiv in the same manner, at a dizzying pace while a vehicle speeds through its streets.
The film was a Takflix creation[11] that was chosen for the 2023 Berlinale[12] and earned a Special Mention from the International Short Film Jury, captures the sense of contemporary conflict and the loss of normalcy through visuals displayed on a global scale during Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
[17][10] Nadia and her husband, Ilya Gladshtein, had resided in Kyiv before to the invasion of that country, although they usually spent the winters in Dahab, to avoid the city's gloomy and frigid months.