Here's a magnificent triumph in everything it's set out to do. You may ask what's so interesting about following the point of view of a fly.
Well, "The Fly" is one of those old school animations that simply isn't done these days unless if there's loads of computers and artificial intelligence
involved. Ferenc Rofusz's is very detailed, curious, fun and thrilling to watch, as we follow the fast and furious movements and observations of a
fly moving through different spaces, nature and then entering a house where a disaster of sorts will take place as a person tries to get the fly, as
it moves through several objects, bothering everyone with its noise.
I got to know the work of Ferenc Rofusz through another curious and bizarre animated short called "Deadlock" (1982), which is also about an
unusual point of view (the limited view of a man who's about to get executed by a firing squad), and both works have a great sense of hyper-realism
that for a few instances it doesn't feel like we're watching an animated but instead a real image that later is transformed into drawings, all captured
by a careful black-and-white cinematography. A most deserved Oscar was given to him and "The Fly", one of the greatest works of its kind. 10/10.