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Pixilation (from pixilated) is a technique where real actors are used in an animated film, by repeatedly posing while one or more frame is taken and changing pose slightly before the next frame or frames. Thus the actor becomes a kind of
living stop motion puppet.
The first film to use the pixilation technique is Jobard ne peut pas voir les femmes travailler (Jobard can't see women
working) from Emile Courtet in 1911.
Other examples include the Canadian short film Neighbours, and the music videos for "Road to Nowhere" by Talking Heads, "Sledgehammer" by Peter Gabriel, as
well as the tour-de-force full length independent film The Wizard of Speed and Time by Mike
Jittlov.
This is not the same as pixelization where an image is blurred by
displaying part or all of it at a lower resolution.
Pixilated also means affected by pixies, or bewitched (a pixie is
a kind of sprite or elf),
and in British usage is a synonym for being intoxicated by alcohol.
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