Believing
in sentence
559 examples of Believing in a sentence
Everyone wakes up in the morning
believing
he/she is the star of "the movie," and that anyone who interferes with one's own personal agenda is in some way the enemy.
Any fan of Russian cinema will have great difficulty in
believing
the sub-par performances phoned-in by Mashkov and Bodrov Jr., and will perhaps be utterly perplexed by Bodrov Sr.'s hackneyed and confusing script, which is coupled with uncharacteristically weak direction.
We, the jury, find this film guilty for its indecent exposure to many of us sitting around
believing
it's a total waste of our time!
I personally have a hard time
believing
that she could play a mysterious and slightly obnoxious character because it just isn't in here.
So we go down the slippery path of
believing
that some lives, just ain't worth living, and then we'll decide that as some people can't really decide for themselves then we'll bring in the state to decide for them.
The credits sequence at the start of the movie fools us into
believing
that we're going to be in for an atmospheric film, but when the movie starts properly; it soon becomes apparent what we're actually in for.
villains reflection in a mirror that separates his head and shoulders side-ways from his body (seeing is believing).
Can you people please stop
believing
everything this man says.
Hayakawa also falls in love with Peil's daughter Tsuru Aoki (Ume-Ko),
believing
she's the reincarnation of his long lost princess.
Evans managed to fleece the studios for over a million dollars, suckering baby-boomer executives into
believing
his screenplay -- a combination of nostalgic, 1960s references and a disturbing drama about child abuse -- somehow equaled good storytelling, and a decent film.
Feeling desperate, Holmes and her friends visit Mrs. Tingle in the middle of the night to try to dissuade her in
believing
that Holmes was planning to cheat.
As I sat watching this movie on ESPN, I didn't find myself
believing
this man was actually Coach Knight.
This "film" reminds me of that "Adult Video Awards" show in which of group of "industrial prostitutes" stand up a praise themselves,
believing
that they are real actors, actresses and filmmakers.
He and his partner (who is soon to be transferred, or soon to be munched on by a fig bucking octopus) investigate in a rather inept manner (all the while
believing
that a huge octopus will kill people) and are occasionally accompanied by a female lackey from the Mayor's office.
Don't put it in and get suckered into
believing
that its pace will pick up, it'll get better, and evolve into a decent denouement.
When I first heard about this movie, I eagerly went out to rent it,
believing
(mistakenly) that it was one of those so-bad-it's-fun movies and that I was in for a treat.
Kutcher agrees to "housesit" for the boss,
believing
it will get him closer to Reid.
However, after watching this movie, one may come away
believing
that every government bureaucrat is a lazy, bloated, conceited, paper pusher who lives exclusively to partake of his next lunch break.
It is a movie which sheds the light on the begging of the Palestinian struggle against the Israeli occupation of Palestine but it does not show the real feelings of the people back then and how they were tricked into
believing
that they could return to their home soon , it does not mention the massacres committed by the Jews like Der Yassine and how they tortured and killed and destroyed the family of any Palestinian freedom fighter it lacks the credibility about the real Palestinian struggle and about anything Palestinian , however it has something about the suffering of Palestinian citizens ending up as refugees in the nearby Arab countries , the movie focuses on the story of the man in coma he is now in the present time and through his story we see the film .
Many people who may not have read the bible will now be mislead by
believing
this film was accurate and the thought of that really bothers me.
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.
Once again proving that the average person can be programed into
believing
anything they say is good, must be good.
I couldn't believe that I spent money to rent this (more on that later) and that I had fooled myself into
believing
that this (based on box cover art and some sort of film fest award blurb) had potential.
Anyone who thinks that the ending to this isn't how it really happens, as the first comment seemed to,
believing
that the girl would come around, realize she's dating an asshole who treats her bad because he doesn't care about her at all is either naive or lives in a more perfect world than I.
I have never been a big fan of the biopic -
believing
that cinema is more exciting when it isn't structured in non-fiction.
Obviously rather sceptical David has a hard time
believing
her so he locks her in a room in his farmhouse & calls his doctor Charles (Ian McCulloch) to come examine her, however once he arrives & they enter the room Lucinda has disappeared.
Starewicz tricks the audience into
believing
they are all moving at once by keeping the background in constant motion and animating only about six frogs or so at one time.
Owen, who wants to kill his detestable mother (Anne Ramsey), watches "Strangers on a Train" and misunderstands Larry's advice,
believing
that his teacher wants to swap murders to eliminate the motive.
Believing
he is dead, some huge hands come out to reach him.
Believing
God saved him, he becomes a monk, searching for who saved him.
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