Two young volcanists who showed “how alive and interconnected the world is”
. “It’s two young volcanologists dancing on the edge of a volcano. They are Katia and Maurice Krafft.” After their first meeting in 1966, the couple married four years later and would spend the rest of their lives fervently absorbed in the activity of volcanoes. In the clip from French TV, they are dressed in matching silver suits, their favoured Jacques Cousteau red hats , swapped for heavy, bollard-cum-stingray shaped metal helmets.
Their imagery, of course, was spectacular, but their humour, philosophies, the fact they were married, they were in love with each other and had this unique way of living.” “Their family and friends always talked about how love was the thing that guided their life. Love for volcanoes first and foremost, and their partnership that supported that passion,”“There’s moments that show up throughout their life, where the more they learned about volcanoes, the more they realised they could never know. That pursuit of the unknown found resonance throughout the film for us; there’s so much we could never know about Katia and Maurice.
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