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The house from the film, used in the production. Located in Ibiza, Spain. More is a 1969 English-language romantic drama film written and directed by Barbet Schroeder in his directorial debut. [1] [2] Starring Mimsy Farmer and Klaus Grünberg, [3] the film deals with heroin addiction as drug fascination [4] on the island of Ibiza, Spain.
More is a 1998 short film created by Mark Osborne using stop motion animation. [1] More has won several awards, and was nominated for an Academy Award as Best Animated Short Film in 1998. [ 2 ]
This category aims to show all articles using embedded or thumbnailed Wikipedia/Wikimedia-video clips. Do not add articles where external videos are linked, like YouTube or similar. For the use of videos in Wikipedia articles, see WP:Videos , WP:Creation and usage of media files#Video and Commons:Video .
Example video from public broadcast (see meta:Wiki Loves Broadcast) and redubbed to English using SoniTranslate. Editors can find existing videos to potentially include on Wikimedia Commons – use the site's search function or its categories like the Videos category to find a video that may be useful for illustrating a given article. As of ...
Articles on people associated with YouTube, including articles on those who made the videos categorized here, should not be in this category. Subcategories This category has the following 5 subcategories, out of 5 total.
Free video is used extensively on Wikipedia, and is also the exclusive type of video content stored on the Wikimedia Commons. While Wikipedia allows for the uploading of fair use video (only in Ogg Theora format), the Wikimedia Commons strictly forbids the uploading of fair use video or any video containing depiction of symbols or other content that is prior licensed under a proprietary license.
Unlike traditional movies largely dominated by studios, video clips are supplied by non-professionals. In 2005, Chinese students Huang Yixin and Wei Wei, later known as " Back Dorm Boys ", lip-synced to a song by the Backstreet Boys in a video uploaded to some clip websites and quickly became renowned.
YouTube's intent in the creation of YouTube Shorts in 2020 was to compete with TikTok, [4] an online video platform for short clips. The company started by experimenting with vertical videos up to a length of 30 seconds in their own section within the YouTube homepage. [5] This early beta was released only to a small number of people.