Accused
in sentence
921 examples of Accused in a sentence
The hero is not; obviously an imitation of a Hitchcock "wrongly
accused"
role it lacks balance.
When you are under torture,(now come the capitals for emphasis, I am not shouting) YOU WILL SAY ANYTHING, EVEN IF IT IS NOT TRUE, EVEN IF YOU HAVE NOT DONE THE THING YOU ARE
ACCUSED
OF, IN THE VAIN HOPE THAT IF YOU SAY AMEN TO WHATEVER THEY ARE PEDDLING, IT WILL STOP.
One suspect after another are
accused.
This creature only needs look at a Pretty Young Thing, and he's
accused
of sexual harassment, and his life is ruined.
This is way far from a real love story (Get the spelling right, Reshammiya - it is not luv or reeal), and is complete with him doing a Mithun da dance, auto rickshaw fight scenes, Himesh getting imprisoned, Himesh
accused
of murder, he fleeing from prison etc ... If you want a good laugh, there is nothing like this one, especially the scenes where he howls in Mehbooba.
Native Chief's son is wrongfully
accused
for the death of his father.
Even in the tradition of "wrong man
accused"
it fails, because the police never seriously accuse the professor, and the killer is never after him.
The movie begins when Ines, daughter of a rich merchant, is
accused
of Judiasm by the church, specifically Father Lorenzo.
He was
accused
of being a child molester and was credited for the breakdown and deaths of his followers.
The steak tartar scene is absolutely uproarious, and the whole nazi torture orgy fiasco is strangely hilarious...I'm not sure what Fulci was trying to do, but has anyone heard that, based on this film, Fulci
accused
Wes Craven of ripping him off with "Scream"?
Barry even returns a lost $100 bill to Fry later on...that was BIG money in 1943!! It's Barry's acts of Christian kindness that get him into trouble and soon, he's wrongly
accused
of sabotage and murder and will likely hang if he can't clear himself.
I'm pleased that this was the work of foreign cinematographers because it can't be
accused
of unfair bias.
What would it be like to be
accused
of being a subversive?
This is what this film explores through the eyes of 2 characters, one being the
accused
subversive, the other being the interrogator.
Like many Hitchcock movies, it's about a man who is being
accused
of a crime he didn't commit, and does everything he can to prove it.
This is a fascinating documentary about a 15 year old black lad who is
accused
of murdering a tourist in Florida and the subsiquent court case that follows.
Based on a story by William Faulker, and shot in his hometown of Oxford, Mississippi, "Intruder" tells the story of Lucas Beauchamp (played with great dignity by Juano Hernandez), a black man unjustly
accused
of the murder of a local white man, and a white boy (Claude Jarman, Jr.) who uses this situation as an opportunity to pay a previous debt to Beauchamp.
He
accused
of killing a white tourist in Florida.
A man is wrongfully
accused
of killing his friend in an aircraft plant fire, and must travel cross-country to avoid the police and discover the true sinister nature of the situation at hand.
In Victorian times a father is separated from his family when he is falsely
accused
of treason and they are sent to live in the country.
Cummings is falsely
accused
of sabotage and goes on the lam, looking for the real culprit.
The familiar Hitchcock theme of a man wrongly
accused
of a crime is nicely played out in this entertaining fare that has elements of "The Thirty Nine Steps" and "North by Northwest," although it is not as good as either of those classics.
People always
accused
them of being manufactured (which they were) or being nothing more than a American knock-off of the Beatles (Again, which they were) but to the kids of the time they were real, they were important, they were legitimate.
Watching the movie, I got a real sense of how things must have been in the South back then; I mean, can you imagine being a Jewish person
accused
of supporting the enemy?
If the caper genre owes a lot to Walter Huston, it also has a debt of gratitude to Jules Dassin, a man that was ahead of his times and who suffered a lot because of his blacklisting when Edward Dmytryk
accused
him of being a Communist.
Some fans have
accused
Russell T.Davies of 'ruining' the show.
An orphan boy named Tom (Tommy Pender), who works for a pair of shady chimney sweeps, is falsely
accused
of stealing from the mansion where he is working at by Mr. Grimes (James Mason) - the real thief - and goes on the run.
Hitchcock made at least 11 films about the ordinary man, wrongly accused, on the run (sometimes really running, sometimes not) to prove his innocence in a situation beyond his control, the first one being "The 39 Steps", which really made him popular in Great Britain.
Pity its being aired on ITV 3. The cast is strong, though I cant get used to the idea of David playing a bent cop, still we all know he's the good guy wrongly
accused.
Robert Mitchum is onhand as a soldier friend of the
accused
killer.
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