The Cameraman's Revenge

The Cameraman's Revenge (Russian: Месть кинематографического оператора, romanized: Mest' kinematograficheskogo operatora) is a 1912 Russian experimental stop-motion animated short film directed and written by Ladislas Starevich.[1][2][3] It, along with other works by Starevich, stands out in the history of stop-motion animation for its use of actual dried insect specimens (beetles, grasshoppers, dragonflies, etc.) as articulated stop-motion puppets portraying all of the characters.

The Cameraman's Revenge
Russian: Месть кинематографического оператора
Directed byLadislas Starevich
Written byLadislas Starevich
Produced byAleksandr Khanzhonkov
Release date
October 27, 1912
Running time
12 minutes
CountryRussian Empire

Plot

The film is based on the love collision of the Zhukov family (deer beetles), the artist Usachini (beetle-beetle), the grasshopper cameraman and the dancing dragonfly.[4]

References


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