Adjust playback speed for any video. Video speed controller for your videos
Super Video Speed Controller allows to increase or decrease playback speed on any web site.
Features:
🎥 Work almost everywhere
🎥 You can adjust using presets or set a custom speed as a percentage
🎥 Use shortcuts
Quick Start: Find the “Super Video Speed Controller” icon by opening the menu under the “puzzle” icon on the toolbar.
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Download and install the extension from the Google Chrome Webstore or Edge Add-ons marketplace
Steps:
Open the video in the active tab. Start playback.
Adjust using the extension’s popup:
The technology works both on large sites and on little-known ones. The coverage of the sites is 99%
You can put it as a percentage and specify the exact value (e.g. +17; -29). Unlike, for example, the Youtube player, where you can put only certain values that are offered to you.
Use the following Keyboard shortcuts:
Super Video Speed Controller for Chrome is available in Chrome Web Store
Super Video Speed Controller for Edge is available in the Edge Add-ons marketplace.
. This was his first foray into comedy, and he approached it with an obsessive "serious business" mindset to maximize every gag. Technical Ambition : To lure audiences away from television, Kramer filmed in Ultra Panavision 70 for projection on massive Cinerama screens. The "Big W"
Would you like a , a character map , or a comparison with Rat Race ? it 39-s a mad mad mad mad world -1963-
The brilliance of the film lies in the simplicity of its setup. It begins with a proverbial bang. A aging criminal, "Smiler" Grogan (played by an uncredited Jimmy Durante), careens off a winding mountain road in the Mojave Desert. Before he kicks the proverbial bucket—quite literally sending a bucket cascading down a ravine—he spills his guts to a group of four strangers who have stopped to help. The "Big W" Would you like a ,
In the pantheon of classic American cinema, few titles promise exactly what they deliver like It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World -1963- . The moment you see the quadruple "Mad" in the title, you understand you are not entering a subtle, character-driven drama. You are strapping yourself into a two-hour-and-forty-minute demolition derby of slapstick, screaming, greed, and automotive chaos. A aging criminal, "Smiler" Grogan (played by an
(1963) is a sprawling, high-octane "epic comedy" that serves as a satirical monument to greed. Directed by Stanley Kramer—better known for somber dramas like Judgment at Nuremberg —the film was his ambitious attempt to create the "ultimate" comedy by gathering nearly every major comedic star of the era into a singular, chaotic pursuit of buried treasure. Plot Overview