Play films
Help
Internet connection
Each film on this site is available for viewing at low speed or high speed.
- Low speed: recommended if your Internet connection uses a dial-up modem (56 kbps or slower). Low-speed viewing results in lower quality image and sound.
- High speed: recommended if you have high-speed Internet (DSL, cable modem) or are connected to an institutional network. Viewing in high-speed mode may cause occasional jerky images and sound interruptions if the speed of your connection is not fast enough.
If you're not sure which speed to use for viewing the films, try high speed first. If the results are not satisfactory, switch to low speed.
Format
Films can be available for viewing in either Macromedia Flash or QuickTime. Image and sound quality are similar for all these formats.
- Flash: lets you view the film directly in the Web page without launching an external application. Requires the Flash plug-in (download for free at Macromedia Flash Player).
- QuickTime (alternative format): requires QuickTime, version 7 or more recent (download for free at QuickTime).
Closed captions (CC)
Translation of the audio portion of a film into subtitles, for example, dialogue, narration, sound effects, etc. These captions let hearing-impaired viewers read what they cannot hear. Closed captions are available for a few films. To access them, you must select QuickTime (under Format) and With closed captions (under Accessibility).
Described video (DV)
A narrated description of a film's key visual elements to enable the vision-impaired to form a mental picture of what is happening on screen. Described video is available for a few films. To access them, you must select QuickTime (under Format) and With described video (under Accessibility).
| Title: | Neighbours/Voisins |
|---|---|
| Director: | McLaren, Norman |
| Year: | 1952 |
| Length: | 08 min 06 s |
Two
neighbours live side by side in harmony until a flower grows on the dividing
line between their properties. Who does it belong to? The argument that
follows ends up with both neighbours in their graves. The most famous of
Norman McLaren’s films popularized pixillation as an animation
technique.
Director
Norman McLaren
Producer
Norman McLaren
Animation
Norman McLaren
Music
Norman McLaren
Photography
Wolf Koenig
Sound
Clarke Daprato
Cast
Jean-Paul Ladouceur
Cast
Grant Munro
Technique(s) used
Pixillation

