Benefit
in sentence
3008 examples of Benefit in a sentence
I've never understood to this day the educational
benefit
of this but thought at the time it was great but slightly scary.
Soon he finds himself digging entrenchments hoping to
benefit
himself in his wife's eyes.
Location's were marvelously chosen and human emotions in it's characters brought a realistic link to my bonding with all the elements that Mr Carpenter utilized throughout, to his and his film's
benefit!
The only way to get the full
benefit
is to watch it two or three times in quick succession so you know it and then ignore the subtitles.
Supernanny Jo Frost, in each episode, gives a family the
benefit
of her hard-earned experience.
I only wish the Mammoths had been in more of the picture, but when you see them, they are also well done (remember, SFX was done in those days without
benefit
of computers, some poor devil had to actually put all that hair & fake tusks on real elephants!)...the same effect was used on the elephants in "Quest for Fire".
Personally I thought it was pretty well done from sheer imagination and inspiration,also without the
benefit
of a large budget and interviews with actual victims/criminals.
With the
benefit
of knowledge I have reappraised Conrack and consider it a masterpiece.
It seems to have been low, almost state
benefit
budget size but it has it's charms like the lovely ladies in it.
It was absolutely horrible what Dassin had to go through, but he did achieve his greatest work because of it, to the
benefit
of all of us.
Released upon a Fremantle DVD, this largely lustreless affair depicting a man 'neath the spell of a seductress does
benefit
from top-flight visual and sound quality, and although no extra features are provided, the above-average production quality enhances able efforts from cinematographer Robert Primes and composer Stephen Edwards.
I implore you all: read the book, or the cliffnotes even; watch the previous versions of it, even Kusminsky's; but stay away from the numerous future reruns, during which you will not receive the
benefit
of the commercial-free premiere.
I commented on this when it first debuted and gave it a "thumbs in the middle" review, remarking that I'd give it the
benefit
of the doubt beyond just the first episode.
That really made me angry that scholarship would normally be used to someone who could
benefit
the team.
Too many disparate ideas introduced for no
benefit
at all... other than sensational parts for the time.
Greenaway got so enamoured with presenting the movie uniquely, and not to the film's
benefit.
Ineptly edited and shot, with incredibly annoying performances from Devon Sawa and Jason Schwartzman, the film ended, without the
benefit
of having made me giggle once.
So when I watched this film, I automatically gave it the
benefit
of the doubt.
Since audiences don't
benefit
much from seeing a whiz kid figuring things out, it's a strange choice: the movie has successfully been prevented from engaging any topic.
So, these listless automatons are whisked through a series of implausible and confusing scenarios, often without even the
benefit
of transition scenes.
I like to give all movies the
benefit
of the doubt, and I really wanted to like this one.
It would really
benefit
from a few early clues as to who these people are and what they are doing.
I wanted to give Drawing Blood the
benefit
of the initial doubt.
The only
benefit
of this movie is an amazing life-extending effect: it feels like you've been watching this movie for years after only the first half hour has passed.
The only
benefit
to this movie was that it's so astonishingly bad, you do get a few laughs out of it.
Rsther than turning one family in a deprived area into potential millionaires, it would be far better to help the community as a whole where instead of spending the hundreds of thousands of dollars on one home, build something for the whole community ..... perhaps a place where diy and power tools can be borrowed and returned along with building materials so that everyone can
benefit
should they want to.
Like Bono or Johnny Depp (whom they seemingly asked to keep his pirate costume on to
benefit
from his current success in Pirates of the Caribbean).
However, I felt it deserved the
benefit
of the doubt.
There's not much educational content that the intended target audience could
benefit
from, but they do seem to have a theme each show and try to teach kids about sharing and respect and other basics, so I like it for that.
A fringe
benefit
is hearing a young Frank, with that wonderful voice and skinny vulnerability that he abandoned for his wise-guy persona later on.
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