Audience
in sentence
3750 examples of Audience in a sentence
Obviously the screenwriter wanted to do a scary horror film but at the same time inject some teenage comedy for the young target
audience.
This film attempts to make deep connections with the
audience
through various symbolism and just ends up being annoying.
I am not quite sure if the director's purpose was to truly portray some sort of deep message to his audience, or if he just sought to shock the hell out of them with gore, sex and violence.
Whenever a caller makes a "profound" (empty) point about something, Stone shoves the camera at one of his character's face as they are stricken with some traumatic realization that is never revealed to the
audience.
Let me pose this question to you, "Do
audience
members need more in a documentary than just a straight forward story to maintain interest"?
Why? Jensen never took us, the
audience
members, to the next level.
There might be just enough stuff happening to keep you from falling asleep and it doesn't look too cheap, but this still is horror aimed at an
audience
that were in their very early teens during the 90's.
I might have been part of that audience, but still I got as good as nothing out of it when watching it now.
The character presented to the
audience
looked as if he could start as tight end for the Oakland Raiders.
And while the set-up seemed good enough, it proceeds to only make the
audience
gasp in horror.
It tries to be hip, and appeal to the young MTV-generation audience, but it is just downright laughable.
It seems to the
audience
as if the whole thing is real even though you know, deep down, you're watching fiction.
As for Julie: she's quiet and contemplative, but that doesn't do much for the audience, or for the film.
It's an interesting story but the problem with this movie is how quickly the
audience
is told what's going on and then it's kind of a horror movie with the heroine fighting off the bad boy of the group that's taking things to the next psychotic level.
Although this movie was made in Europe, it plays to a young American
audience
with it's focus on gore, sex and the horror film premise(which is really it's big downfall) and explains why it probably made good money and spawned a sequel but doesn't necessarily make for a good movie.
(This film is confusing, because the
audience
doesn't know what the story is.)
Personally, I find this completely insulting to even the dimmest of
audience
members.
Therefore, no intelligent
audience
member can really believe in the possibility of his evil.
This film is a very bad example of uninspired storytelling, which tries to hide behind an "artfilm" facade, trying to shock the
audience
with unmotivated violence (against women) to cover up for it's lack of psychological depth of the characters & internal conflicts.
Red Skelton does a cute bit with Donna Reed and Margaret O'Brien, but the other comedic bits suffer from an apparent vacuum between the performers and the allegedly-live
audience
(they're awfully silent until the editor cuts to them for exaggerated reaction shots).
Seriously, the guy who directed this thing is terrible and should never get to direct anything else again, except maybe his son's school play, but even then, he should have to pay the
audience
to see it.
This film does a very good job of getting the moral message across to its
audience.
It hit its target
audience
very well but I don't see how anyone else could enjoy this film.
Pretentious storytelling such as this always uses the same technique: 1) Throw opaque, unstructured threads around to perplex the
audience.
Movie reviewers and critics love this movie, which only confirms to me that most of them would rather sound intelligent than review how an
audience
may enjoy a film.
She is so convincing on the witness stand that while we know she is lying through her teeth (we did after all SEE her kill the man), we in the
audience
find ourselves, like the jurors, believing in her innocence, before we suddenly catch ourselves.
Its target
audience
is clearly those who have never run a marathon, or novice marathoners.
Most of the movie-going
audience
didn't go to see Tommy or Jimmy Dorsey playing themselves; they went for the plot and the music.
Those ghastly smiles she would do when she scrunched up her piggy little eyes in a way that I think was 'supposed' to be cute and make the
audience
go - "aahhhh bless!"
The cast runs around like "Mad Max" wannabes, and they seem to be sharing a joke that they do not want to share with the
audience.
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