Of Thee I Sting | |
Director: | Friz Freleng |
Story: | Michael Maltese |
Animator: | Ken Champin Gerry Chiniquy Manuel Perez Virgil Ross |
Layout Artist: | Hawley Pratt |
Background Artist: | Terry Lind |
Music: | Carl Stalling |
Distributor: | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Color Process: | Technicolor |
Runtime: | 7 minutes 6 seconds |
Language: | English |
Of Thee I Sting is a 1946 Warner Bros. cartoon directed by Friz Freleng, written by Michael Maltese and narrated by Robert C. Bruce that is a parody of World War II documentaries.[1] Material was reused from the Target Snafu cartoon.[2] The short was released on August 17, 1946.[3]
The title is a play on Of Thee I Sing.
In Target for Tonight-style (a diagram of the target is actually stamped "Target for Tonight" by an officer mosquito), a narrator briefs the audience on a mosquito attack upon a hapless man enjoying a day on a screened porch. It goes from (under)ground school to field training against "enemy" countermeasures such as insecticides and swatters, takeoffs from improvised "aircraft carriers" made from a sardine can with a cigarette lighter as its superstructure and other military weapons.