Tagged: country: canada

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Autoerotique – Turn Up the Volume

You can maybe call it cake-cide — the killing of cakes — or call this video a cake-splosive video. In the end, Toronto-based band Autoerotique’s video Turn Up the Volume has a lot of stylish shots of colorful cake blowing up captured by high speed cameras.

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Jeremy Ji – Goldfish Tears

Goldfish Tears (金魚的眼淚) is the first single for Jeremy Ji’s (紀佳松) sophomore album Fish Man (魚人), which will be released on April 8th.

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Sucker Punch OST

Most of the time, films use music to fill in awkward gaps in dialogue, or for random mash-up scenes that are meant to pull on your emotional heart strings. Sucker Punch used the music to tell the story

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Sucker Punch

When 20-year-old Baby Doll loses her mother she knows instantly that she has to protect herself and her little sister from their stepfather. But things don’t go as planned: Baby Doll’s sister is dead, she has a gun in her hand and her stepfather winds up committing her to a mental institution.

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A Brief History of Title Design

Put together by Ian Albinson, founder of The Art of the Title Sequence, this video presentation was shown for the SXSW Excellence in Title Design competition screening.

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Scott Pilgrim vs. The World

Scott Pilgrim vs. The World is an action/comedy/romance film based on the graphic novel series Scott Pilgrim, created by Bryan Lee O’Malley, directed by Edgar Wright, and starring Michael Cera as the main character.

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Avril Lavigne – Goodbye Lullaby

Goodbye Lullaby, her fourth studio album, is more of the same, except she curses a lot more in her songs, making her sound like an 8-year-old who’s found out that she can say bad words.

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Monkey Majik – westview

Monkey Majik’s sixth studio album titled westview comes charged with acoustic catchy pop tunes in six full tracks in English, and the rest in funny Japanese or combining it with English.

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Last Train Home

The Last Train Home is a documentary that follows the Zhang family during the most tumultuous time of the year in China, Chinese New Year week, where train stations are packed with people from all over the country trying to get back home.

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Justin Bieber: Never Say Never

Never Say Never is a good movie that could have been a great film. It was a pop culture exploitation, a fascinating exploration of the pop idol psyche, and the way that modern technology affects the time-honored tradition of teeny bop worship.