Explain the animation technique used in the 1933 film King Kong.
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King Kong's movements were created using a manual technique called stop-motion animation. The special effects staff built a small-scale clay mock-up of the creature, positioned it, and snapped a single photograph, called a frame. Then they made a tiny change in the position of the model to represent its location a fraction of a second later and shot another frame. This process of "move the model, shoot a frame" was repeated thousands of times and, when the frames were shown in sequence without interruption, Kong appeared to come alive on screen. (This is similar to the "flip-book" style of animation in which pages of a notebook are filled with drawings and riffled to produce the effect of motion.) Stop-motion special effects were used in many fantasy, adventure, and science-fiction movies of the 1940s through 1970s.
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