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The first cinema was founded in Łódź in 1899, several years after the invention of the Cinematograph. Initially dubbed Living Pictures Theatre, it gained much popularity and by the end of the next decade there were cinemas in almost every major town in Poland.
- 3.2 per 100,000 (2011)
- 1,122 (2011)
- 32 (62.7%)
- United International Pictures 26.8%, Forum Film 12.8%, Imperial Cinepix 11.9%
Film nasional PLN 43.5 juta (6.2%) Sejarah sinema di Polandia memiliki sejarah yang panjang dalam sinematografi , dan sinema tersebut dikenal secara luas, meskipun film-film Polandia kurang tersedia secara komersial ketimbang film-film dari beberapa negara Eropa lainnya.
- 3.2 per 100,000 (2011)
- 1,122 (2011)
- 32 (62.7%)
List of films produced in the Cinema of Poland. For an A-Z list of films currently covered on Wikipedia see Polish films .
Polish films based on plays (10 P) Lost Polish films (7 P) Polish silent films (2 C, 26 P) Polish film posters (13 F)
Author: Bartosz Staszczyszyn. Share: Of all the areas of Polish culture in which a foreigner requires guidance, cinema comes to mind first. Many are acquainted with its international stars, but few know the background story and the gems that haven't yet made it globally.
The date of its première, October 22, 1908, is considered the founding date of Polish film industry. Soon Polish artists started experimenting with other genres of cinema: in 1910 Władysław Starewicz made one of the first animated cartoons in the world - and the first to use the stop motion technique, the Piękna Lukanida ( Beautiful Lukanida
Polish cinema was a world of prosperity, one which came to an abrupt dark end with the advent of WWII. But the brilliant first days of Polish film cannot be forgotten: they shaped the cinema of the country forever and had a bright impact across the world. Piotr Lebiedziński, photo: Wikipedia.