José Heppell

参加作品

Francoeur : On achève bien les rockers
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Drawing inspiration from their unique relationship, Virginie Francoeur explores the journey, work, and imagination of her father Lucien, an atypical creator, an uncategorizable provocateur, and offbeat Dad, worn out by a life of excess.
The Trenches
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This animated short by Claude Cloutier is a pictorial account of an attack on Canadian soldiers during WWI. On the edge of the battlefield, recruits are dreading the order to attack. At the signal, a young soldier leaps into a hell of fire and blood where the earth engulfs both the living and the dead. Blending archival images and Cloutier’s hypnotizing brushstroke, the film is a dazzling illustration of the futility of war.
Sleeping Betty
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Princess Betty sleeps in a narcoleptic stupor. The king appeals to his subjects to wake her, and several respond: Uncle Henry VIII, Aunt Victoria, an emotional alien, a cool witch and a handsome prince. This worthy Prince Charles lookalike has to leave his royal suburb to save the princess, but will Betty be wakened with just a kiss?
Tales of Sand and Snow
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In a quest to rediscover the spiritual values of his own people, an African filmmaker from the Gourmantche tribe of Burkina Faso visits an Aboriginal band, the Atikamekw of northern Quebec. The resulting documentary is a dialogue between those who divine the future in the sand with those who use snow-encased sweat lodges to reconnect with the spiritual world.
Antagonia
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The film is an abstract allegory, showing two penguins with different ideas abot sea creatures that are their food or their shadows, depending on the perspective. Basically, sense-twisting animation.
Islet
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For an Inuit fisherman, technology means absurdity. Floating out on a block of ice, he doesn't have any other choice to grab onto some flying fish to save himself.
Why Is the Sky Blue?
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Why isn't it green, yellow or striped?
Science Please! : The Atom
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Where would we be without these microscopic particles?
Science Please! : Gravity
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What keeps us down to earth? This clip from Science Please! answers the question.
Science Please! : Explosives
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Are cows a time bomb just waiting to explode? Part of the Science Please. collection for children.
Fire
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What lights your fire? Part of the Science Please! collection for children.
Science Please! : Electricity
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How do we convert motion into electricity?
Science Please! : The State of the Matter
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A clip in the Science Please collection, The State of the Matter uses archival footage, animated illustrations and amusing narration to explain how temperature affects the state of matter.
Science Please! : The Light Bulb
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Edison's bright idea, or how the electric light bulb works?
Science Please! : Lightning
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A clip in the Science Please! collection, Lightning uses archival footage, animated illustrations and amusing narration to explain: What causes the electrical discharge we see as lightning?
Science Please! : The Internal Combustion Engine
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Four strokes of genius.
The Dirt on Soap
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How soap cleans? Part of the Science Please! collection for children.
Science Please! : The Wonderful World of Colour
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A clip in the Science Please. collection, The Wonderful World of Colour uses archival footage, animated illustrations and amusing narration to explain how the cones of the retina enable us to perceive the spectrum of colours.
Science Please! : Slippery Ice!
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A clip in the Science Please! collection, Slippery Ice! uses archival footage, animated illustrations and amusing narration to explain why we slip on ice.
Science Please! : The Wind
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In the collection Science Please!, the first clip, entitled The Wind, explains the phenomenon of the wind with the help of archives, animation and narration.
Science Please! : Wheel Meets Friction
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A clip in the Science Please! collection, Wheel Meets Friction uses archival footage, animated illustrations and amusing narration to explain how the invention of the ball bearing reinvented the wheel.
Science Please! : The Force of Water
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A clip in the Science Please! collection, The Force of Water uses archival footage, animated illustration and amusing narration to explain the Archimedes principle, of why some things float and others sink.
Sweet Lies and Tender Oaths
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An eccentric old grandmother decides to leave her nagging daughter's house to live on her own. Her teenaged granddaughter seizes the opportunity to go too.