The image of the late Polish People's Republic is marked by a constellation of tensions:
between a difficult reality and its propagandistic representation between the authorities and
society between rigid ideology and aspirations for freedom and between the desire to preserve
cultural continuity and the inevitability of impending change. Polish cinematography had to
operate within these conditions forced to adapt to internal transformations while at the same
time becoming increasingly exposed to global cultural influences. These and related issues are
addressed in Paradoxes of Late Socialism . The discussion takes into account the political
social economic and cultural circumstances that shaped cinematography. The development of
individual film genres is outlined and the evolution of popular cinema in other socialist
countries highlighted. The book also examines how the authorities dealt with cinema and popular
culture in general. Themes such as eroticism rock music and retro nostalgia are explored as
they appeared across popular genres and reflected the social changes of the 1980s. The final
part analyzes three major narrative types - comedy crime-action and fantasy - to show how
shifting genre conventions and social transformations are represented in these films.