Actually, this problem not seems to depend on exact card model or
something like this (people with at least ATI and Nvidia encounter this
in various Linux distros including Ubuntu, Kubuntu and whatever else).

And actually there is nothing wrong with X server. It is obvious that
usual output method was never intended to draw hi-resolution video so
it's slow and this is "by design". About accelerated video... as far as
I know, there is something like this happens: when composite mode used,
screen updates are no longer synchronized with display frame rate. This
causes no troubles to usual windowing operations but video displayed
through accelerated interfaces (xvideo, opengl, ...) blinks and tears.
Blinking and tearing happens since when composite mode used it happens
that video frames are output without syncing to monitor frame rate.
Hence it happens that frames could be just partially drawn when getting
actually displayed. This surely leads to nasty blinking due to repeated
sequence of partially-drawn frames.

Here goes verbose lspci log (launched under sudo since without it it
lacks some info).

** Attachment added: "lspci.log"
   http://launchpadlibrarian.net/21288352/lspci.log

-- 
Awful video tearing+blinking when using any output method except X11 in video 
players.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/315267
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