This text focuses on non-military aspects of Polish-Soviet relations in cinema before 1989. It offers an analysis of two melodramas, the Polish “Interrupted Flight (L. Buczkowski, 1964),” and the Soviet-Polish “Remember Your Name” (S. Kolosov, 1974). From a narrow ideological perspective, both films show Polish-Soviet relations in a positive light. Yet, the author points to omissions and understatements that reflect the ambiguities present in Polish-Soviet relations of the time. As a genre. melodrama complicates superficial statements of Polish-Soviet friendship.
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