Border
in sentence
1854 examples of Border in a sentence
This train-wreck begins with Brujo and Alma crossing the Mexican
border.
Soon, they get suspended in order to "Round-up" the killer of partner Eddie Acuff (as Tommy) along the Mexican-U.S. border; they discover creepy gold runners in the process.
He does nothing but chant horrible language that does nothing, so they decide to cross the
border
get on the train to make their way to L.A. to see his uncle to lift the curse.
How could a film dealing with illegal Mexican immigrants being robbed and beaten over the
border
be dull?
This movie clearly has an agenda, which could be summed up like this: Never, never cross the
border
(either physical or metaphorical).
All that is outside one's country's
border
(and specially US borders) is dangerous, malevolent and people there will hate you, or envy you or try to steal you or something else.
All but the youngest Americans are probably familiar with the iconic call of "Laaaaaa-sie!" from little Timmy, or whatever the kid's name was, wailing his little tow-head off for his
border
collie friend.
This "back-woods" period piece follows young (not so) Wild Bill as he and his mystic family dangerously run illegal Canadian whiskey across the
border
during America's prohibition.
Mexican Werewolf in Texas is set in the small
border
town of Furlough where Anna (Erika Fay) lives, her best friend is Rosie (Martine Hughes) & she has a Mexican boyfriend named Miguel (Gabriel Gutierrez) who are determined to track a beast down that has been terrorising the town, killing livestock & several residents including some of their friends.
Who is going to believe that a Mexican patrol from Mexico City is going to go all the way to catch the main characters to the Mexico-US
border?
And that this policeman is going to be able to use its radio from the
border
to Mexico City!
Two of the gang paddle across the
border
send a second party across in a car.
Then two of the smugglers put the whiskey in a boat and float it over the
border.
Cheesy stereotypical Mexican
border
culture (mystic grandfather with the rattlesnake and potions, granddaughter in her mariachi-style restaurant getup).
Shockingly, it made a ton of money on both sides of the
border.
Why didn't they just call it
"Border
patrol"?
The plot isn't too inventive but the whole
border
patrol theme is interesting and the ex-marines as drug smugglers twist is cool.
The film is all about
border
patrol officers protecting there territory which is the
border
of Mexico.
Some scenes involving the hero's fiancé seemed to
border
on parody but they were so brief that they didn't ruin the film.
The story is taken from the annals of the Mexican revolution and involves the U.S. in a
border
town dispute with the Mexican bandits who cross the Rio Grande in the early 1900s.
Living right across the
border
from Canada, I have watched hockey for 50 years both there and in Buffalo....but I didn't think much of this cartoon.
Why? Excitement, crossing a
border
into a Soviet governed country, experiencing the smells and the feel of East Germany, which is why Night Crossing is excellent, it captures that very feeling, and it is exciting.
Being from eastern PA, right on the
border
of Northern New Jersey, I still get a feeling like this was a documentary more so than a movie.
I've always sort of liked Paul Schrader's work (you can't argue with Taxi Driver and Light Sleeper is an amazing film), but while his writing often seems to
border
on the bombastic, his directing style is usually non-existent.
Van Damme plays a
border
patrol agent who is out to stop heroin smugglers trying to cross into the United States.
So run for the Damme
border!
My favorite character is definitely Sammy Davis Jr. Jr., the grandfather's "seeing eye dog" who is really a psychopathic
border
collie.
Le's make a deeper analyses... -What does it mean a little town in the
border?
- It means that sometimes we can go too close to the
border
of doing something we thought we couldn't... - What does it mean the arid soil shown in this picture?
Yul Brynner is Major Surov, a singing, dancing, vodka-drinking Russian Officer stationed near the Austrian -Hungarian
border
during the Hungarian uprising of 1956 in Anatole Litvak's The Journey.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Would
Their
Across
Between
Along
Countries
There
Other
Could
People
Country
Controls
Military
Security
Southern
About
While
Where
Refugees