The Insects' Christmas
The Insects' Christmas
| 01 January 1913 (USA)
The Insects' Christmas Trailers

A Father Christmas ornament climbs down from a decorated tree, and goes to the forest. There he creates and decorates a Christmas tree for the forest creatures. He then invites all the insects, along with a friendly frog, to come and enjoy the gifts he has prepared, and to celebrate Christmas.

Reviews
Horst in Translation ([email protected])

"Rozhdestvo obitateley lesa" or "The Insects' Christmas" is a black-and-white silent film from over 100 years ago, even if there exist tinted versions. It is a Russian 7-minute movie by Wladyslaw Starewicz who is certainly considered one of the most impactful filmmakers from that time back then, especially when it comes to animation. Unfortunately, the genre was not yet ready for Starewicz' mind at that time and the possibilities simply weren't there to make a quality animated film. The only reason I can think of why this one is worth a watch may be to see how different it is compared to American filmmaking from the 1910 and animated filmmaking in the decades afterward. I am really generous with my 4/10 rating here. It is not good at all, but you can't really blame the maker, just the time and technology.

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Red-Barracuda

This Wladyslaw Starewicz film must surely be one of the first examples of a festive movie. In it a Father Christmas ornament comes to life and descends a Christmas tree. He then travels to the forest and conjures up a little Christmas tree. Several insects and a frog are invited to approach the tree and celebrate the spirit of Christmas themselves.This animated feature recalls another Starewicz film, the insect based Cameraman's Revenge. It would be only fair to say that this one is not up to the standard of that bizarre classic though. It doesn't have the same level of surrealism and is less imaginative. It has a much sweeter message and is more clearly aimed at a family audience. That said this remains an extremely charming and well-crafted little flick. Its Christmas ambiance is very nice and it has warmth without being schmaltzy. The blue tint used gives it a certain winter fell too. These insect films by Starewicz really are something that every fan of animation should take time out to see.

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ackstasis

Wladyslaw Starewicz was the father of Russian animation, his highly-imaginative stop-motion insect short films drawing universal acclaim, with his most popular work probably being 'Mest kinematograficheskogo operatora / The Cameraman's Revenge' of 1912. 'Rozhdestvo obitatelei lesa / The Insects' Christmas' was produced the following year, and it is a cheery seven-minute animated Christmas film, emphasising the importance of the holiday as a time to get together and enjoy oneself. The film begins when Father Christmas suddenly awakens during the night of Christmas Eve and clambers down his decorated tree, exiting into the frosty holiday snow to hold a gathering for the "forest children."Starewicz draws on all his favourite stop-motion creatures in this one, with Father Christmas inviting Miss Dragonfly, a ladybug, a grasshopper and an assortment of other beetles and insects to his gathering around the Christmas tree. Even the lanky Mr. Frog gives Father Christmas the honour of his company, though it doesn't take long before Mr. Frog gets into a feud with a beetle over the ownership of a particularly large present. Nonetheless, the general purpose of the film is to promote kindness and togetherness on Christmas, and it's certainly a worthy moral, far removed from the darkly humorous and cynical outlook of 'The Cameraman's Revenge.'Particularly interesting, I thought, was how well 'The Insects' Christmas' was able to create the atmosphere of a bitter winter's night. Aside from the windswept, snowy background that Starewicz must have created, the film takes place entirely against a blue tint. The result is that, even just watching the film, with Father Christmas' robes billowing in the wind, I was starting to feel chilly. The quality of the stop-motion animation is as good as ever, with the insects almost moving naturally (despite walking upright), though Mr. Frog did appear a bit ungainly.

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tavm

The Insects' Christmas is interesting in that this may be one of the earliest depictions of the winter holiday in animated form I've ever seen. Certainly of the stop-motion puppet version. The fact that Father Christmas invites both insects and frogs to the celebration shouldn't be surprising since filmmaker Ladislaw Starewicz made both The Cameraman's Revenge (1912) and The Frogs Who Wanted a King (1922). Kids may by bored by both the silence and black-and-white photography but it's at least worth a look for animation enthusiasts and Starewicz completists. This and the other shorts I mentioned is available on Milsetone Film and Video's The Cameraman's Revenge and Other Fantastic Tales DVD distributed by Image Entertainment.

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