Anger
in sentence
1266 examples of Anger in a sentence
Now I will focus most of my
anger
on William Shatner.
Already angry at her father for their frequent relocations, her
anger
is exacerbated when her mother is suddenly confined to a sanatorium for tuberculosis.
Unfortunately the experience was nothing but a disappointment leaving me in
anger
and confusion.
It's all there: not just great, great bands like Black Flag, Fear, X, the Germs, whose names may not mean much to you today, but whose influence on today's alternative rock music can not be over-estimated, but also the promoters, the media and first of all the audiences - the punks - all portrayed in a manner that makes you laugh, shudder and gasp with astonishment about the energy, the
anger
and the fury these youths put into their music.
Without Guney's sometimes overblown social-political
anger
(especially in his last film, the 1983 prison drama "Duvar-The Wall"), "Distance" captures the essence of Turkish life quite remarkably.
Maybe you're just venting your
anger
because that girl dumped you on World of Warcraft.
In a sense, the details are not important--you could change the details and set this film today and it would work just as well--but the loneliness and insecurity and superficial passion and self-righteous
anger
of the characters is captured well.
The father ,an irresolute man ,under his wife's thumb,although he tries hard to play the macho,wanted to make up for the mediocrity of his life .So he saved his "honor" by forcing his son to do his duty.The scene in which Estevez's hatred for his father explodes is very intense.The actor-director gives a restrained performance,interiorized,as Lee Strasberg's students used to do,and his final burst of
anger
is increased tenfold so.
Her
anger
and initiative were inspiring.
The movie was realistic and showed actual human feelings whether it be Pete's
anger
of the blond girl's sneers or the guy that asked questions.
And even in the show, there are moments of sadness and
anger
and etc.
I have seen this film on 3 different occasions.On the first occasion,I was bowled over by this film.It appeared as a very kind film to me.I hated this film as a sentimental garbage on my second viewing.However my third viewing reasserted my belief that it is a good film.There is a lot of emotional power in this film especially scenes of emotional confrontation between Mr Kramer and Madam Kramer.There are some scenes in which Meryl Streep appears a cruel person despite the fact that she is a beauty in real life.Dustin Hoffman appears as a lost hero unable to grapple with the recent task of his child's custody.There was even a controversy on the sets of this film.According to the master cameraman Nestor Almendros there was a shot in which he just escaped getting hurt as the character of Mr.Kramer,in order to show the intensity of his anger,decides to break a glass hard.Luckily nothing happened to Nestor.Kramer versus Kramer shows the destruction of a family structure.It also tells how family must be maintained if there are kids involved.
His
anger
comes to a head when a man assaults his autistic daughter.
But this is the first film that had me seething with
anger
after I saw it.
This movie is brimming with human emotion - jealousy, lust, anger, bravery, determination.
Some won't believe there ARE disabled people like Rory, full of
anger
and rebellion.
The incident of
anger
in her mother obviously block a mothers display of possible physical abuse of her or her disabled sister at one time or another; thus masking her Mother's truer involvement in family losses.
It feels real in its moments of anger, love, and war (and hopelessness).
I'm left with feelings of disturbing anxiety and extreme
anger
over the way that the government handled and then covered up a tragedy of this magnitude.
It's like a father saying his son has been punished enough, and despite his
anger
he realizes his point has been made.
Ben, his character is a very shy boy, incapable of showing his true feelings about everything, his despise about his over ruling mom and the resentful
anger
towards his father who is unable to step up and confront his unfaithful wife.
The anger, angst, and desparation of urban labor battles is magnificently told in a fashion that is neither obtrusive nor patronizing.
The movie concentrates upon teen life in the Bucharest suburbs trough the main character, not focusing so much on the character's shape or definition but more on the
anger
that he and other characters feel.
The title "Furia" means rage rather than anger, but could be regarded in the movie in both senses from the behavior of actors.
The pace is steady and constant, the characters full and engaging, the relationships and interactions natural showing that you do not need floods of tears to show emotion, screams to show fear, shouting to show dispute or violence to show
anger.
Your other self will be stronger, harness all the
anger
all the rage to use whatever means available to avenge the innocence of your parents onto that criminal, those criminals, any criminal.
I realize that people say this not to
anger
the African American community (if they are not African Americans themselves).
I particularly liked the planted gag of the ambulance soaking the "filthy bum" who then shouts after them in
anger "
you filthy bums", I mean wow, someone's online degree in literature is paying off!
The memory banks of most of the reviewers here must've short-circuited when trying to recall this Cubic Zirconia of a gem, because practically everyone managed to misquote Lloyd Bochner's Walter Thornton, when in a fit of peevish anger, he hurls the phallic garden nozzle at his new wife, Jerilee Randall-Thornton, (a nearly comatose Pia Zadora) which was used to sexually assault her earlier in the movie...but I'm getting ahead of myself.
If you had to believe this absolutely ridiculous story, unemployed men of all ages behave like teenagers, have no anger, no fear, no frustration, etc.
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