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Enter only the year the previous single was released. title2. If it is a double A-side single, enter the name of the second- or flip-side of current or article title. (The current or article title with be automatically generated with quotes and in bold and will appear as the first of the two; the year is also generated from the |released= year ...
If the poster used is not from the film's country of origin, then the poster's language or country of origin can be specified (see the English-language poster in the infobox for Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives as an example). If the poster is illustrated, its illustrator may be specified in the caption (see the infobox caption for E ...
If the numbers were preceded by the letter "R", then the poster was from a re-release of the film. One good example is Star Wars ; its original release number is "77/21", meaning it was released in the year 1977 and was the 21st movie assigned a stock number for that year.
Musicians who have released a significant amount of work should be given their own discography articles. These articles should follow the guidelines given by WikiProject Discographies . The discography section of the musician's primary article should link to the separate discography article using the {{ main }} template, for example: {{main ...
If a performer releases two or more songs of the same name, use the year of release, or the year and name of the artist ("Heaven" (1977 Bonnie Tyler song) and "Heaven" (1998 Bonnie Tyler song)) You may include the name of the film or musical a song was released on ( "Almost There" ( The Princess and the Frog song) ), or the studio which owns ...
A song may be released as a promotional single even if no commercial version of the single is available to buy. An example is "Theme to St. Trinian's" by Girls Aloud, released as a promotional single for the movie St. Trinian's. The song was later removed as a single to avoid confusion with Girls Aloud's actual single "Call the Shots".
Reynold Brown's poster for Attack of the 50 Foot Woman (1958), with a billing block at the bottom. The "billing block" is the "list of names that adorn the bottom portion of the official poster (or 'one sheet', as it is called in the movie industry) of the movie". [24]
2 Development and production. 3 Release. 4 Critical ... Theatrical release poster. Directed by: Jim Jarmusch: ... The documentary is titled after a song on the 1973 ...