Audience
in sentence
3750 examples of Audience in a sentence
I don't doubt that the core family
audience
will be mildly entertained by this film, but if they'll be satisfied is a completely different question.
In fact the
audience
were so into the ludicrous antics on screen it played like a Rocky Horror session.
I agree this novel of Jane Austens is the difficult to portray particularly to a modern audience, the heroine is hardly a Elizabeth Bennet, even Edmund is not calculated to cause female hearts to skip a beat.
Most probably self funded this is clearly an attempt to redress important issues but ultimately undermines its point of existence in that the question needs to be begged, who would ever put money into distributing this and secondly if a market
audience
doesn't exist to watch, buy or rent this film, why would anyone bother in the first place?
With a humor that would appeal to an exclusive, small audience, the average viewer will find it pointless and monotonous.
The
audience
rose and applauded.
Sure the human artwork is intriguing for a few minutes, so make a short, but do not subject an
audience
to pointless nonsense, masquerading as filmed entertainment.
I suppose in 1934 some part of that
audience
long ago would enjoy this tepid farce.
Strange Interlude was a piece of experimentation he concocted where the characters on stage, look aside to the
audience
and say what they really are thinking and then resume conversation.
The
audience
sat in silence through almost the entire film, with only a few, rare, occasional chuckles.
The opportunity is here to build an atmosphere, to draw an
audience
into a movie.
The
audience
will buy it because, well, none of us are psychologists, and none of us are suffering from schizophrenia (not that we know about) so we take the story and believe it.
I was embarrassed by the performances and sat in an
audience
who laughed when they surely were supposed to be moved by the story.
Despite some strong language it looks like a family film but after a while it becomes clearly that Pete's Meteor is a hardly suitable for young
audience
drama.
How well she does this, we'll never know, because 99.999% of the
audience
don't actually know Julia Roberts personally (and reading about her in Hello magazine doesn't count).
I would think the target
audience
is somewhat similar being they are both on the same night and lineup.
Either I'm getting too old for this sh17, or I'm just not part of Bruce's target
audience
anymore.
My guess is they wanted to reach a new
audience
and thought color and modern-day actors were the answer, since those were the main changes.
While the movie is unfolding the story stops and the actors start preaching to the
audience.
It's so sloppy and choppy that it serves only to confuse the
audience.
Otherwise, the film was a shameless lie was and frequently joked about by the contemporary
audience.
Jeff Fahey has such alert eyes and a smudgy, insidious smile that every character he plays seems villainous; therefore, it doesn't really work to cast him as the good guy of the piece, the
audience
is just waiting for his character to crack and start blowing people away.
You have to mainly reconcile reported testimonies, conflicting info sources, and Hollywood creativity to produce something the
audience
can get into.
The original Airport (1970) was a classic of its kind, and the first two B-movie follow-ups (Airport 1975; Airport '77) were watchable fun at best, amusing camp at worst; but this crass and inept final entry lacks any entertainment value and displays a shocking contempt for its
audience.
With
audience
sympathy skewed, the film loses its narrative progression.
I swear, you could hear my suburban London
audience
gasp at the obviousness.
My question is , when will the
audience
tire of reliving this maddening dilemma?
Okay ..... the
audience
was shocked......sickened....disgusted.....numbed.
So the film winds around some early silliness and stumbles along with all sorts of Alexander allusions in both the foreground and background (which I really liked), ending with a dated shark attack (you couldn't go to a movie in '79-'80 without some shark showing up to menace the audience).
The picture starts out by introducing two elders -- Mormon missionaries -- and it seems that the
audience
will get to know them and grow to care about them.
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