Believed
in sentence
2041 examples of Believed in a sentence
I have always
believed
that the horror genre is the most difficult to master.
When I am watching it, I don't know why I punished myself like that but I did, I must be a masochist, but anyway whenever I watched it I literally
believed
I was watching the single worst TV comedy ever produced.
In the meanwhile, Mary meets her cousin Colin, a sick and spoiled boy who stayed all his life in bed, since everybody always
believed
he would die very young.
When it was over, and I had gathered my jaw off the floor, what I
believed
I'd seen was a wrongheaded attempt at a John Waters movie, without any of the wit or skill.
The really oddball sequence where Larry and Mike are questioning Orville in his home(..with nude posters of models pinned all over his living room walls)really has to be seen to be believed..seeing Orville squirming and wallowing in misery over his sexual appetites(..he even admits out loud to "beating his meat" while at the drive-in, completely overwhelmed in embarrassment!)while the detectives appear quite appalled.
The effects in this one are pretty shoddy(the "man" hanging out of the shark's mouth has to be seen to be believed), and most of the underwater scenes of the shark are laughable...you know that shark isn't that big.
The actors were all excellent, especially the two brothers, but I never
believed
they were in High School.
This film atrocity must be seen to be
believed.
I had to press the return function of the remote control when I
believed
to hear that Paul Gégauff, main actor and writer of the novel which is the base of Chabrols "Une partie de plaisir", says about his wife: "She sides with Korzybski who claims to refuse Aristote, but she hasn't read either one".
So you are in this movie-rental place with a horror section that is just miles wide and furlongs in length, and you are, just imagine, scanning the rows for anything that catches your rather jaded (maybe from too many low-budget or low-brow horror flicks, too much mockery, or stilted dialogue, too many effects or musical stings) eye in that special way that only a truly mongoloid flick can do--and what do you see? of course, a really chintzy colored pencil and pastel picture of this tree/man graft that has women trapped (mayhaps metaphorically) in his "roots," but the really bad part is the complete physiological inaccuracy of the picture (witness, in your mind's eye, the nipples of this bare-chested "evil" tree/man placed in the exact (okay, semi-exact) orthocenter of his pectoral muscles--just plain zaniness from look one!), and it has this tag on it that reads, "He does bad things to them...in the Garden!!" and what can you do or say (except fall in love with it on the spot and say "I love you," respectively associated, right there in the orchard of neon horror that is the movie rental place)--and then so imagine your heartbreak when you get home, undress it from its plastic case and discover to yourself the fact that it is completely: affectless, toneless, actionless, heartless, penniless, paceless, plotless, heartless, and, perhaps most horribly, humorless--you and your best bud cannot, for the glory that the world holds, come up with a single joke to combat the ceaseless waves of offense to your senses and sensibilities that this offers--not to mention devoid of a) evil and b)seeds of said evil...there are no effects: it features untold minutes of floral footage, which cause the actors to expire at completely surreal and random moments--with which occasional happening you can utterly sympathize...I went looking for a movie too bad to be believed, and I found it.
Teddy Roosevelt and his rather diverse band of recruits
believed
that they were going to Cuba to save the Cuban people from an evil and exploitive Spanish colonial government.
They were men who quoted Shakespeare's Henry V "we happy few" and
believed
it implicitly.
If nothing else, I got a good laugh from this piece of 70s camp, which truly has to be seen to be
believed!
Believed
to be the quiet bookworm, a man that wouldn't stir up anything, Romero makes a conversion in order to save his people from the oppressive government.
This spectacularly silly'n'slapdash soft-core Sasquatch smut really needs to be seen in order to be
believed.
It's a set-up from the get go because the mob never
believed
he could pull it off, and was hoping that he would be killed, and then they would inherit his club.
What would you do if you
believed
the end of the world was coming in less than one and a half hours?
The film is awful.But it's awfully funny at the same time!The producers didn't want it to be funny,but it most certainly is.There are scenes in this that have to bee seen to be believed!Spoiler alert!Best bits:a)The elephant stampede,b)The tiger attack,c)The scene in which Evelyn Kraft runs through the forest,d)The scene in which the all-powerful monster gets some oranges thrown right into his face...There are more,quite possibly even funnier moments,but I don't want to give them away for those who haven't see it yet.This is the epitome of so-bad-it's-good cinema.It's a King Kong-Mighty Joe Young-Tarzan-Godzilla RIP-OFF!Seriously,this film is ridiculously bad.That's exactly what makes it worth seeing.It is the best COMEDY off all time.The effects are bad,the acting is bad,the "script" is bad...Please,do yourself a favor and go buy it.You won't get bored watching it(If you like these kind of movies).Hell,it's even WORSE than "Plan 9 from outer space"!
All of this after a totally unbelievable scene where she is rescued by him after he comes out of nowhere to overpower an armed and dangerous killer who was about to blow her away...I didn't believe it any more than I
believed
her manhandling several 6 foot 2 inch 200 lb thugs throwing them against the car and handcuffing them like they were match sticks.
The other three guys introduced are of perfect stereo-type of a robber's movie: we have the old veteran, the main character's best friend and somebody who wouldn't let him down; the 'oppponent', a very aggressive and not to be
believed
in type; last but not least 'Smiley', an old acquaintance of the main character; he organizes the money for the deal.
Instead I
believed
what I was watching.
I never would have
believed
it, that you could combine Spaceships and futuristic races with Norse Mythology...yet, here it is in one GREAT movie!
Please do not make the same mistake as I did when I
believed
the positive critics this film received.
This has to be seen to be
believed.
BBC One actually transmitted this at 11 PM, since they
believed
that The Peacemaker was a film more deserving of the 9:00 slot.
Back in the 1970s, some young directors really
believed
it was possible to make movies for television, rather than "TV movies" (one-episode 90 minute TV shows or the longer, even less cinematic soap opera 'miniseries').
The advertising really fooled me--I
believed
I was going to see another "Como Agua Para Chocolate."
On the brink of World War II, a man
believed
killed in World War I returns in "Tomorrow is Forever," directed by Irving Pichel and starring Claudette Colbert, Orson Welles, George Brent, Richard Long, and Natalie Wood.
I
believed
and was heart felt by all the character's love connections and especially the beautiful love story between older couple Tommaso and Isabel really killed me...
Revolting garbage, has to be seen to be
believed.
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