Audience
in sentence
3750 examples of Audience in a sentence
Inside jokes for the older folk in the audience, lots of action for the kiddies.
"L'Auberge Espagnole" collected the
audience
wherever it was shown.
It gathered
audience
awards on many film festivals all over the world.
Because of the cinematography and acting, the
audience
can feel the change in tone from beginning to end as the tone in the environment in the movie changes.
"One True Thing" is the kind of movie where the
audience
is inspired greatly greatly inspired performances.
In Paris one of the smaller Revival houses shows in one of its salles a more or less continuous Lubitsch retrospective and I'm pleased to report that this played to a very appreciative
audience
right across the age spectrum though I doubt whether any were actually alive when it was first released in 1938.
While many people have complained about the ambiguous ending, it gives room for the
audience
to think and interpret it from the signs.
In 1957 it was Billy Wilder's The Spirit of St Louis, a film that had everything - top director, huge star, best-selling true story about an American hero - except enough of an
audience
to cover its costs.
The movie is a delight for both the target youth
audience
and for adults who can suspend their maturity long enough to watch this film through the eyes of their own youth.
It may not be what critics consider 4 star viewing, but I love it for what it is--a fun comedy meant to please the
audience.
Every time the supposed explorers and we , the audience, is primed to set its first sights one of the wonderous new worlds, for some ungodly reason, the filmmakers decided to distract with an "emergency" or some false alarm or some bit of artificial dramatic suspense.
The attractive plot is perfectly supported by a smart direction where every single component (cool desaturated photography; cold symmetrical design; unemotional acting; slow, highly controlled camera movements) helps in building an unique weird atmosphere that will keep the
audience
suspended until the end.
And most of all, in this film's defense, it is appropriate for a family
audience
(at least I remember it being that way when I saw it on Christmas Day a few years ago.)
That way, the
audience
can feel more sympathy for the hero.
During a chase scene into a cinema,
audience
members laugh at the action of a schlocky comedy/gangster flick as the saboteur cell shoots it out for real with the good guys and accidentially kills a guffawing movie-patron.
The entire cast seems to be having a blast, and it's not at the expense of the
audience.
Without doubt a great all round show that if shown today would attract a huge following.Bodyguards was only 6 episodes and a trailer,but deserved a few more series to really bring it up-to speed.With outstanding performances from the highly talented and versatile Sean Pertwee and the dynamic Louise Lombard,it really did put it up with the likes of the Proffesionals,The Sweeney and Thief Takers.The story lines are based on the Diplomatic Protection Services and with great filming and story lines and scene locations,it stood out from some of the junk that gets churned by other TV production companies.I do not think that it has been shown on terrestrial TV either,such as Sky or Freeview,witch is a shame as if it were to be shown nowadays,i am sure it would get a large viewing audience.So i hope one day the guys at Carlton TV decide to release it on DVD,cheers,Nick.
The film starts with the discovery of the body of one of the students, then traces the lives of the group over the previous hours, leaving the
audience
in suspense until the last minutes as to the identity of the deceased.
It handles the
audience
with kid gloves while delivering a truthful look at societal problems.
The hopes and dreams and perspectives of each of the characters is endearing and we, the audience, get to know each and every one of them, warts and all.
While the plot is the kind you've seen in thousands of other movie musicals during this time, the fact this was made for a certain
audience
makes this one of the more fascinating features I've seen during this Black History Month.
In 3 distinct acts, we get an abstract Streisand (in an after-hours art museum looking at and sometimes becoming the works of art), a comic Streisand working an already adoring
audience
in a studio circus (populated with many fuzzy and furry animals), and best of all, a singing Streisand in mini-concert format just-- well, frankly, just doing it.
Nurse Betty is one of the darkest comedies to be advertised towards a mainstream
audience
in years, and considering its moderate box office and critical success, perhaps moviegoers weren't as dumb and brainwashed as we though they were.
Gentle and genial film seems to have been overlooked as a triviality...and to be fair the narrative is a bit tenuous and lightweight as drama....but I feel the simple wonder and joy of the scenes depicting the first impact of a new art on an alien and sceptical society have a radiance and naturalness which capture the century long romance between cinema and
audience
better than any film in years.
Bedrooms and Hallways gives its
audience
a look into the mind of a man who thinks he's found himself, only to find out that he's not so sure he found the right guy.
In addition, several surveys, which were designed to gauge the
audience'
s prejudices, were conducted before and after screenings of the film.
I suppose it's quite an achievement to be able to present to an
audience
a true tail about a frail man; a tail in which the protagonist will spend the majority of the film on his back, in a bed and totally unable to move.
"Tesis", "Open your eyes" and "The Others" were proof of Amenabar's talent and skill as a filmmaker, but (in my humble opinion) were also flawed films in their attempt to outsmart the audience, always offering one turn of the screw too many, favoring cheap thrills, twists and turns over depth and resonance.
They acted with their souls, and this is what gets across to the
audience!
The
audience
becomes intimate with each of the main characters, and explores the day-to-day issues facing teenagers - including drugs, promiscuity, being gay, bullying and violence.
Back
Next
Related words
Movie
Their
There
Would
About
Which
People
Story
Really
Characters
Think
Could
Other
Where
Never
While
Something
Character
Director
After