Black
in sentence
5065 examples of Black in a sentence
I just came back from the Late-night cinema and it was indeed a silent way out as most of the audience pondered though the real-life
black
& white images of the partition,the freedom movement,etc which was very much reminiscent of the lives' our forefathers faced!
You will feel like you are watching some lost espionage noir classic from the late 1940's with the perfectly lighted
black
and white scenes, while at the same time feel you are on the brink of something beyond the cutting edge, especially in scenes like the assassination aboard the train.
But Bakshi's aims are higher: throwing up these grotesque and exaggerated images of not just
black
people but Italians/mafioso, homosexuals, Jews, overall New York-types in the urban quarters of Manhattan in the 70s, he isn't out to make anything realistic.
The character design is a little reminiscent of the French animated film Persepolis from a couple of years back, with very simple characters with thick,
black
outlines.
This film is not in
black
and white.
Moreover, Yuzna further spices up the grisly goings on with a wickedly twisted sense of pitch
black
gallows humor.
I just saw this cartoon for the first time and recognized the caricatures of famous
black
entertainers... Cab Calloway, Bessie Smith, (not Josephine Baker or Sophie Tucker, who was white), Thomas "Fats" Waller, Bill "Bojangles" Robinson, Stepin Fetchit (notwithstanding) Louis Armstrong and the chorus girls are out of the famed "Cotton Club" in Harlem.
This was what
black
society was like before the crack epidemics, gangsta rap, and AIDS that beset the ghettos in the eighties.
Keepin' your head above water, making a wave when you can, this show showed how
black
society struggled to work together as people and families, before they started to prey on each other and everyone else in order to survive the horrors of the ghettos.
It is heart-breaking to see what the
black
ghettos were like then and what they have become now.
but it was
black
and white in a color world, and a lot of people didn't even know what it was, and there was an opportunity to remake it for television.
It is a shame that so many people can see only offence in what is, and was always intended to be, a light hearted piece of entertainment that in no way sought to denigrate
black
people.
If anything it is a tribute to the infectious humour and musicality of the
black
race.
"The Woman in
Black"
is easily one of the creepiest British ghost stories ever made.A young solicitor,after arriving in a small town to handle a dead client's estate,is haunted by a mysterious woman dressed all in black.The film is loaded with extremely eerie atmosphere and the frights are calculated for and deliver the maximum effect possible.The action keeps the viewer deeply involved and the finale is quite disturbing.The acting is excellent and the tension is almost unbearable at times.So if you want to see a truly creepy horror film give this one a look.I dare anyone to watch "The Woman in
Black"
alone at night with the lights off.Highly recommended.10
Blandings Builds His Dream House" 10/10 due to an aspect that makes us in the 21st century cringe a little bit: the fact that a
black
person is the faithful servant (somewhat reminiscent of Stepin Fetchit).
Several years ago the Navy kept a studied distance away from the making of "Men of Honor," a film based on the experiences of the service's first
black
master chief diver's struggle to overcome virulent racism.
The plot has white Mack (Kevin Kline) and African-American Simon (Danny Glover) becoming friends after Simon saves Mack's life in the
black
ghetto.
Filmed in
black
and white, it manages to convey a genuinely creepy miasma.
A group of friends decide to take a camping trip into the desert-and find themselves stalked and murdered by a mysterious killer in a
black
pick-up truck."Mirage" is obviously inspired by Spielberg's "Duel" and Craven's "The Hills Have Eyes".Still this slasher yarn offers plenty of nasty violence and gore.The film's gory highlight is a sequence involving a man having his arm and leg chained together around a tree and then having his limbs dismembered when the chain is pulled by a truck.There is also a little bit of suspense and some exciting stalk-and-slash sequences.The acting is pretty lame and the script is quite weak,but the film is fast-paced and shocking.B.G.Steers who plays the villain is fairly threatening.The desert locations provide some atmosphere and the gore is rather strong.Overall,if you like low-budget horror films give this one a look.8
Mixed in with the scenes of mad-slasher gore and zombie infestation are some truly visually effective shots of the title character, "The Midnight Skater" zooming through the campus in a
black
hoodie, looking for all the world like a cross between the Grim Reaper and, say, The Silver Surfer.
All the Miike trademarks are here, the violence, the
black
humour, the homosexuality, the taboo testing and the difficult to like central character.
There is a simultaneously subtle but intense dread induced by the woman in
black
lurking at the edge of the frame, not quite clearly visible, so that you feel (like the solicitor hero), unsure whether its just imagination or not.
The story takes place in 1968 and it's beautifully filmed in
black
& white, almost a film noir style with its deep shadows and stark images.
I'm not a Horror film fan as such but love the old "B" movies and
black
and white Sci Fi films.
We see modern
black
movies do the same thing, but with the new trends (stereotypes), "ho's" and the "hood" and such.
This is an entertaining look at the Gospel as presented by Johnny Cash (adorned in black, of course) who sings a lot and narrates a bit also.
So I know that many people hate
black
and white films, they think old movies can't really be funny, this movie should make them change their minds.
While there aren't any talking animals, big lavish song production numbers, or villians with half white / half
black
hair ... it does have 1 thing ... realistic people acting normally in a strange circumstance, and Walt & Roy did in their eras with the studio.
This and The Replacement Killers are the movies that had people labeling the director Antoine Fuqua as the
black
Michael Bay.
I would never have thought I would almost cry viewing one minute excerpted from a 1920
black
and white movie without sound.
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