John Paul Young

John Paul Young

Born: July 16, 1956
in Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Movies for John Paul Young...

Love You Like That
Title: Love You Like That
Character: Self
Released: October 21, 2021
Type: Movie
Cupids arrow has hit the coastal town of Seafront Sands. A lonely soul will discover a secret about the love we all share for the first time.
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Gambling, Gods and LSD
Title: Gambling, Gods and LSD
Character: Himself
Released: September 8, 2002
Type: Movie
Filmmaker Peter Mettler embarks on a mission that takes him around the world. He is determined to record the diverse modes of transcendence that people in different cultures adopt in order to live life to the fullest. As he traverses civilization and wilderness and encounters a range of lifestyles and ideas, the filmmaker's mind-expanding trip around the world grows into a poem of images and sounds, reflecting the fragmented but alluring worlds it attempts to capture.
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Title: Earth: Final Conflict
Character: FBI Agent
Released: October 6, 1997
Type: TV
Years ago, the Taelons came to Earth, offering friendship and technology to humanity. But there are those who believe the Taelons have more sinister motives.
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984: Prisoner of the Future
Title: 984: Prisoner of the Future
Character: #38 (voice)
Released: August 22, 1982
Type: Movie
A corporate executive is taken prisoner by an underground organization known as The Movement, and is turned over to a ruthless interrogator.
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Shock Rock
Title: Shock Rock
Character: Paul
Released: January 1, 1979
Type: Movie
Canadian horror film featuring music from Canadian punk bands The Curse, Cardboard Brains, Space Phlegm, The Ugly, Willie English, The Spenglers and The Secrets.
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Metal Messiah
Title: Metal Messiah
Released: April 26, 1978
Type: Movie
A bizarre sci-fi rock opera like little else being produced under the banner of Canadian film at the time, Metal Messiah is about an enigmatic metallic-skinned stranger trying to stop society's self-destructive obsession with rock and roll. Anchored in Toronto's live music scene if the late 1970s, this dystopian parable was the feature film debut of local music impresario and director Tibor Takács. Working with screenwriter Stephen Zoller, Takács' film is a crudely crafted, episodic work that plays out like a glam version of Amos Poe's avant-punk NYC flick The Foreigner (1978), but with even more ambition, attempting to scale to the bombastic rock opera heights of films like Phantom of the Paradise (1974) and Tommy (1975). (from: http://www.canuxploitation.com/review/metalmessiah.html)