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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Essential Viewing for Animation Fans, September 23, 2003
Simply amazing work from the man who practically invented stop-motion animation. Films included are:* Cameraman's Revenge (1912) The unusual subject of insect infidelity is tackled. The oldest film in the collection, and fascinating - If he didn't used real bugs in this, he used VERY realistic models. * Insect's Christmas (1913) A "Santa" ornament jumps of a Christmas tree, and brings Christmas to the banks of a pond for various insects and frogs. * Frogland (1922) The story of the frogs that wanted a king. Zeus sends down a succession of undesirable candidates, then (apparently) gets annoyed with the request and sends them a Stork! * Voice of the Nightingale (1923) A little girl captures a nightingale. A hand-tinted film, and very beautiful. * The Mascot (1934) A dog puppet attempts to help a poor, sick girl by bringing her an orange. Along the way he encounters other toys and a host of demons! * Winter Carousel (1959) A bear and a rabbit court a pretty girl bear while playing in the snow. While "The Mascot" is undoubtedly the prize to this collection, I'm also very fond of "Voice of the Nightingale", a touching hand-colored film combining stop-motion and live action. (trivia - the girl in the film, billed as "Nina Star" is actually Ladislaw's daughter Irene). My only beef with this release is that it's the exact same films as on the older VHS/Laserdisc release. I know that "Nose to the Wind", "The Dragonfly and the Ant", "Christmas Eve", and "The Lily of Belgium" have been released on other video compilations which are now out of print - couldn't they have gotten some of those added? And when are we going to get to see his masterpiece, "The Tale of the Fox (Le Roman de Renard)?
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