Bitter
in sentence
686 examples of Bitter in a sentence
Four lovely young nurses in their last year of nursing school experience all kinds of turmoil and excitement in their lives: sweet Susan (winsome brunette Elaine Giftos) tries to comfort the bitter, terminally ill Greg (a moving performance by Darrell Larson), eager, but neurotic Phred (lovely blonde Karen Carlson) romances handsome gynecologist Jim Caspar (affable Lawrence Casey), free-spirited hippie Priscilla (the stunningly gorgeous Barbara Leigh) gets impregnated by laid-back drug dealer Les (the solid Richard Rust), and compassionate Lynn (nicely played by Brioni Farrell) helps out angry Mexican revolutionary Victor Charlie (the excellent Reni Santoni).
Yes it contains action scenes depicting
bitter
battles and terrible destruction.
Predjudicial visions are
bitter
and not worth the effort to be recognized as an opinion.
The Butcher (played by Philippe Nahon in both films) is a man
bitter
with the world.
Irish film-making sure has a lot of
bitter
angry people involved with it and the spleen venting comment made about this is evidence of it..
We have the example of the innocent bystanders who try to get by during an absurd war, the cynical doctor who makes fun of his patients and provides the only
bitter
humor of the whole movie, the perverse opportunists who try to make the best of an atrocious event (Bjornstrand's character), the innocent dead children, the nameless figures almost turned into animals from the boat etc.
If anything, it brutally contrasts our ambitions and hopes to the often
bitter
truth.
This movie is a
bitter
sweet experience with an entertaining mix of thoughtful suspense, joy and drama.
Meanwhile, the
bitter
Meiko tries to find Bruno so she can exact her revenge on him.
Some may shun Coppola's unapologetic twisting of events in order to underline the finale with
bitter
irony, however the forcefulness and drive behind the picture nearly obliterate its shortcomings.
This leads to the bitter, grumbling old women to become even more
bitter
and grumbling, getting drunk and bemoaning their rotten children and inconsiderate friend the moneylender.
As far as the end is concerned well it's a both
bitter
and happy end.
But
bitter
too, because this homecoming means that the Greystoke line won't be ensured and is condemned to disappear... Christophe Lambert finds here, his first (and last?) great role.
A
bitter
sweet story of a woman who loves a very stubborn man.
Instead of selling out for cliches and big stars, it relies completely on the excellent acting from a strong cast, the strength of a well written script, and a fascinating and
bitter
story.
Kudos are also in order for the stellar cast of familiar B-flick faces: Mayne has a deliciously eye-rolling ball with his flashy role, Leon Askin contributes an amusing cameo as
bitter
washed-up director Wolfgang, Nita Talbot adds some class as flaky psychic medium Mrs. Rohmer, plus there are nice turns by Luca Bercovici as jerky drama student ringleader Saint, Jennifer Starrett as the sweet Meg, Jeffrey Combs as the geeky Stu, and Scott Thomson as the nerdy Bobo.
Speaking of characters, they are all your stereotypical favorites - the greedy selfish lawyer, the egocentric actress, the has-been baseball star, the video voyeur, the
bitter
girl, the spooky quiet chick, the 'nicer-than-nice' nice girl, a freakin' black cat... and I didn't care about any of them.
It surely needs no cinematic or authorial genius to convey to us the information that a man who behaves like Alexandre is going to end up hated, miserable, and alone, or that women who insist on expecting love from a man like Alexandre are going to end up disappointed and
bitter.
Jim Carrey is noteworthy in his performance as the devilish Grinch, but whether it's the dialogue, the pacing, or extraneous storylines heaped upon the initial plot, the transformation from
bitter
miser to gleeful benefactor just does not ignite convincingly.
They're dark,
bitter
creatures with nothing better to do than to spread their own misery.
The story is something about a
bitter
old coot, Louis Trebor (Michel Subor), who goes searching in Tahiti for a heart transplant, but beyond that, I have no idea who any of the people in the movie were or why they were doing what they were doing.
It could have been a decent movie, but it left me with a
bitter
taste in my mouth.
Did I mention that I have never been so
bitter
about a cinematic pile of crap in my entire life?
Every time the film switches to Michael Douglas, there he is with a bitter, sour expression, barking out questions and orders, screaming and yelling whenever he gets the chance.
I cried
bitter
tears over these sad events, and here's why: First off: this film has good intentions, especially if you're a Christian like me.
But, although I was very interested in the topic and like to think and discuss about religion (I am an atheist), it was hard to force myself to watch the movie to the
bitter
and in my opinion somehow unconsciously funny end.
The movie lays everything on so thick that you don't care about the happy ending when it comes because the rest of the movie is so
bitter
and unbelievable.
There is a lot more depth to this subject the shallow ranting of a
bitter
director like Lee.
Sister Mary was an exaggeration, a lampoon, a
bitter
satire of a serenely confident, doctrinaire and highly judgmental nun -- and as played by Lynn Redgrave, she was hilarious.
Ivan (Valeri Nikolayev) is a bitter, cynical journalist who investigates the unexplained.
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