Blonde
in sentence
332 examples of Blonde in a sentence
We 'accept' an idea of the incumbent
blonde
in all probability as that spoken of daughter.
The film is not the merry romantic mix-up it wants to be, and Demi is too callow to be passed off as this
blonde
sweetheart (she fails to connect with anyone on-screen, not to mention the audience).
Let alone fake
blonde
extensions.
Arrogant and despicable sleazeball control freak fetish photographer Roger Neale (a nicely slimy portrayal by Joseph Farrell), his perky assistant Maura Holloway (the delightfully spunky Rachael Robbins), amiable, morally uptight lug Sam Rogan (likable Rob Monkiewicz), and three beautiful models -- sweet, naive Bridget (the always adorable Misty Mundae), vacuous Lauren
(blonde
looker Heidi Kristoffer), and meek Jennifer (fetching brunette C.J. DiMarsico) -- go to a rundown and abandoned old building for a photo shoot.
Director Al Adamson's wife, the busty dim witted bleach
blonde
Regina Carroll is used to great effect in her best role!
the girl runs around everywhere, she does everything at top speed, make beds, deal with problems, watch the baby grow, unfortunately those of us who live life, know that a year doesn't just fly away, it has to be lived, that we have to wake up, brush our teeth, go to work, scratch our ass, come back from work, drink ourselves silly, get made fun of by vain
blonde
girls and then do it all over again.
The first ten minutes made me laugh more than the whole of "The Bucket List".A
blonde
- haired lady with muscular thighs and some sort of circus costume jumps on and off lorries killing highly - armed soldiers before disappearing from our ken rather mysteriously.That bloke from Bros should have stuck to causing pre - pubescent girls to lose bladder control because there's more future in that for him than in acting.
Becky went on a like a cheap
blonde
slut.
Well, if Pat and Chris from Saturday Night Live-fame had a child, it would resemble Pod People's little femme boy waif, Tommy... a bug collecting, perky little
blonde
he/she that spends too much time to itself... of whom finds itself more comfortable with circa 1970's shag-carpeted, peanut-snorting, karate chopping aliens, rather than his alcohol-soaked uncle (I think) and his Bonnie Frankin (One Day at a Time TV series) haired mother.
Her dyed
blonde
locks now toned down to a still teased, yet slightly more modest black.
This movie was a bit too racist for me to enjoy and it was not a comedy: the dumb
blonde
woman stereotype; the backward Mexican peasants; the White-Anglo New England anthropologist having to explain the mixture of pagan/Catholic religious beliefs to a Mexican who should already know this stuff!
Can you imagine a beige haired Shirley MacLaine wondering around her apartment naked reading T.S. Elliot while a Mediterranean man and a gorgeous
blonde
Scot are sitting on the bed, paying more attention to this pixie like artistic woman than the story that she reads?
It's been close to 30 years since I watched this movie with Richard Lynch as the
blonde
vampire, and who played the part to perfection.
Speaking of which, this movie really marked Jon Voight's transition from washed-up
blonde
leading man to a truly quirky and interesting character actor.
After cruising with Milner all night, teenage Carol hates to say goodbye but does, waving from her porch with the light on; Toad survives one bad accident after another, but his real moment is in hearing praise from his date (fantastic, husky-voiced Candy Clark, dolled up like a speeding Sandra Dee) just before she says good night; after chasing his dream date all night, Kurt (Richard Dreyfuss, green and anxious, and appealingly bemused) finally gets to talk to the stunning
blonde
wonder on the telephone, where she whispers a wrenching goodbye.
Other than that, the production apparently had a low budget based on the props; the courtroom looked like something out of Star Trek; the defendant's hair was alternatively
blonde
or high-lighter yellow, depending on the lighting.
A psychic predicts that a sultry young
blonde
will meet with tragedy on a train...A handsome young man murders his wife, then takes refuge in a sleepy small town...A young boy witnesses the murder but keeps it a secret...
The blonde, the young man, and the boy all wind up in the same boarding house, sharing close quarters, and trying to cover-up their unsettling secrets.
I'm not sure, but I think a couple of the counselors were played by porn actors/actresses, especially one horse-faced
blonde
with a decided lisp or hearing problem.
He's blonde, blue eyed and slightly effeminate - so its a riot when he's threatening black drug dealers or knife wielding Mexicans - this is the kind of movie where some of the supposed high schoolers are played by people who look thirty (like the guys in shower who are knifed).
Demi Moore is lovely, though the
blonde
hair is not.
You have a giant ape, a
blonde
babe whose nipple pokes out for almost the entire movie, gore, death, and destruction.
Too bad she had to compete with a hundred other bosomy
blonde
Marilyn's for the honor.
A virtually unrecognizable Amy Irving, sporting a head of
blonde
curls, is DeNiro's distraught wife.
Better still, this fine freaky flick certainly doesn't skimp on the copious gratuitous nudity: adorable baby doll beauty Dawn Dunlap bares her whole bod while bagging a few rays in a sauna, stupendously slinky British
blonde
bombshell June Chadwick (Lydie on the short-lived "V" TV series) happily hops in the sack with Colby a mere five or six hours after making his acquaintance, and both Dawn and June even take a shower together.
Who knew that she was also pretty as a
blonde!
She is very blonde, and her curling hair fills the screen...
Curtis Hanson adapted H.P. Lovecraft's short story about a modern-day warlock living as an outsider in the East Coast town of Dunwich, where a relative of his was once hanged for believing in a race "superior to man"; robbing the local university library of its Necronomicon, he uses a pretty
blonde
to complete an occult fertility ritual (he props the book up between her legs!).
I loved her in the long
blonde
hair and flowy summer dresses much more then her typical costumes designed to show off her body.
I almost expected to hear the
blonde
competitor say, "You're okay LaRusso", when she presented the trophy, or have one of Pierre's kids get on the mike at the end and say, "If I can change...and you can change.........everybody can change."
Back
Related words
Movie
Young
Beautiful
Their
About
Woman
After
Where
Would
Which
Character
There
Lovely
Little
Brunette
Gorgeous
First
Story
Played
Other