How a Mosquito Operates

6.3
1912 0 hr 6 min Animation , Comedy

A hungry mosquito spots and follows a man on his way home. The mosquito slips into the room where the man is sleeping, and gets ready for a meal. His first attempts startle the man and wake him up, but the mosquito is very persistent.

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Reviews

Stevecorp
1912/01/01

Don't listen to the negative reviews

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Intcatinfo
1912/01/02

A Masterpiece!

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Humaira Grant
1912/01/03

It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.

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Hayden Kane
1912/01/04

There is, somehow, an interesting story here, as well as some good acting. There are also some good scenes

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Horst in Translation ([email protected])
1912/01/05

"How a Mosquito Operates" is a 5.5-minute short film from 1912, so this one is already way over 100 years old. The writer and director here is animation pioneer Winsor McCay from the United States. looking at the year when this was made, nobody should be surprised that this is a silent black-and-white film. It is the story of a little mosquito (as the title already says) who is getting ready for his meal on a sleeping human. And he seems to be a true professional. Of course, this film has not scientific value, but it is all about the comedy and about exploring the new genre of animation for McCay. He was 40 already when he made it and still it is one of his earliest works. It is of course tough to appreciate this one with the level of animation we have today, but everything has to start somewhere right? And we need to be glad that McCay clearly inspired the filmmakers that gave us the Golden Age of Animation a couple decades later. All in all, I would nonetheless say that this one is only for the most hardcore animation lovers or for film historians. Everybody else will probably not really get anything out of the watch.

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Michael_Elliott
1912/01/06

How a Mosquito Operates (1912) *** (out of 4) Winsor McCay film has an overweight man being followed home by a mosquito but things just get worse as the man tries to go to bed. Once in the bed the mosquito begins to attack him in order to get his blood. HOW A MOSQUITO OPERATES isn't a pure masterpiece or anything like that but you can't help but be entertained by his good nature and charm. I think my favorite bits are when the mosquito is having to come up with clever ways to stick the man who after a couple previous times decided to get up under the covers. The animation is extremely good and this includes a sequence where we see the mosquito sticking the man and drawing out the blood. The scene where the mosquito sticks the man's nose is quite painful to watch but it really brings the film to life. What struck me most about the film is the way it's animated but McCay is able to make everything appear so real that you're drawn into the film just like it was live action. The animation looks incredibly good and the two characters are likable in their own way.

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tavm
1912/01/07

As a person who doesn't normally watch horror films but has taken in some once in awhile and, while somewhat scared, was also entertained enough to not be too grossed out, I found Winsor McCay's How a Mosquito Operates a little mind-frightening enough to think if I was still an under-12 kid watching this for the first time, I'd walk out of the room! Seeing the bottom of this creature grow every time he sucks some blood out of this human man who's just trying to sleep seriously gives me the creeps! And that ending when he explodes after draining too much blood! Aaargh! Other than that, this was one of the most compelling and unique animation films made in the early 20th century and it shows that not everything made way before I was born can seem so old-fashioned. So to anyone who's wondered if things made way before your time can seem so quaint and old hat, watch this and see if this doesn't blow your mind!

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MartinHafer
1912/01/08

Okay, I'll admit this isn't the greatest cartoon ever made. It's silent, consists only of simple pencil drawings and never is all that interesting. So why is it STILL a worthwhile film? Well, it's so early and in its day it was considered state of the art. Plus, the film's creator, Winsor McCay, was responsible for some of the first animated heroes--in the forms of Gertie the Dinosaur and Little Nemo. So, because of this very important and impressive pedigree, this film is of great importance to animators, historians and Cinephiles alike. For what it is (an early experimental film), it is pretty good. Plus, without films like this, later more fleshed out cartoons wouldn't have been possible. Interesting and unique, that's for sure.

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