Bounty
in sentence
134 examples of Bounty in a sentence
Can the banker, the bandit, and the
bounty
hunter work together to locate the missing loot?
He ended up in several situations where he was at the mercy of the
bounty
hunters.
The story follows a cyborg and a guy trying to escape the clutches of this corporation and some
bounty
hunters after them.
Though perhaps the story would work well involving almost any ethnic group, the inherent Jewishness of the characters gives extra meaning to the
bounty
of wonderful dialog.
Singer is Jack Ford, the 'Droid Gunner' of the title, grinding out a living collecting the
bounty
on androids.There are some mutants, topless pleasure droids(!), a Scandinavian smuggler, and possibly a half-hearted attempt to make a statement on class or maybe even globalization or......... well it doesn't really matter.
So Monetero has to join forces with cunning, cocky, enigmatic
bounty
hunter the Stranger (smoothly played by the handsome George Hilton) and cagey, corrupt banker Clayton (a delightfully weaselly portrayal by 50's teen idol Eddie "Kookie" Burns) to find the coins.
However, in the original Italian cut Clay McCord rides out of town (weaponless as he has turned in his pistols to the Governor) and is bushwhacked by the
bounty
hunters that have been slowly depopulating the bandit town of Escondido.
She leads a group of burned out cyborgs (That includes William Katt, Evan Lurie and a human scientist played by Zach Galligan) against
bounty
hunter Richard Lynch. Malcolm McDowell has two minutes of screen time as Lynch's employer.
Sedating them into a coma-like state, he brings them to his mansion to collect his tainted bounty," according to the DVD sleeve's synopsis.
Domino Harvey (Kiera Knightley) was a model who dropped out and became a
bounty
hunter.
It kept my attention all the way through; the way a terrible, ongoing chain accident in the fog involving multiple vehicles keeps one watching to the very end... as, after a ridiculous ray-gun fight in a prison on another planet, a pneumaticaly-disadvantaged sexy and mentally unbalanced
bounty
hunter chases a retarded extra-terrestrial fugitive---TO EARTH!
Tony Scott's poor directing style puts shame to an already uninteresting and slightly untrue story of Domino Harvey's life as a
bounty
hunter.
Spoiled-upper-crust-babe Domino Harvey (Keira Knightley, in an ersatz-badass performance as shallow as her gorgeous looks) is sick of the shallow lifestyles of the rich and famous in Los Angeles, and accosts gruff
bounty
hunters Mickey Rourke and Edgar Ramirez to learn a more exciting trade; along the way, there are double-crosses, shootouts, media attention (courtesy of a tongue-in-cheek Christopher Walken, phoning in his trademark sleazebag), and laughable hints at romance.
A story of
bounty
hunters, guns guns and more guns, heavy handed flaunting of sex - for the oh so popular actress (did they write the lap dance scene after they signed her?), over saturated, over exaggerated, one liners, non-linear plots.
Years have past since Alex Rain (played by Olivier Gruner in the first movie) stumbled onto the horrific plot that involved replacing humans with machines however since then a war between cyborgs and humans has emerged and we lost, now a superwoman of sorts who is the daughter of Olivier Gruner's character (She also inherits only half of his minimal acting ability) which I think is the films minimal connection to the first, however when the superwoman is created she hides in 1980 while a
bounty
hunter from the future hunts her down in this confusing sci-fi clunker.
Perhaps it was the overall glorification of being a
bounty
hunter; maybe it was the sexism masquerading as an involving and interesting study of a hard bodied female lead character; maybe it was the mere look of the film with its bizarre yellow glow and distorted blue tints or the manner in which it takes an actress like Lucy Lui; who deserves a lot better than this junk; and has her sit there in the one spot in the room the light cannot directly hit with the same dumb look on her face.
She's the undisputed main character, Domino, a
bounty
hunter.
Steve McQueen won the role of Josh Randall, the old West
bounty
hunter in "Wanted: Dead or Alive," after producer Dick Powell saw this Paramount Pictures' release.
Walker, a
bounty
hunter (apparently one of only three on the whole planet) reminds the prisoners that there is no escape, because there's only one shuttle out of the whole planet and they'd have him to deal with.
Then there's the nameless "Colonel", a retired
bounty
hunter who suffers from a haunting reoccurring nightmare.
This was one of the last Bruce Timm/Paul Dini DTV projects related to their old 1992 Batman the Animated Series, after that Jeff Matsuda came along and re-imagined Batman with his new The Batman series, but anyway, the story of this new Batman movie centers around the appearance of a new vigilante known as Batwoman, however Batman feels the need to stop her because of her extreme methods, and also in the meantime take down The Pengiun and Ruphert Thorn who both are secretly working with Carlton Duquesne(who's having family troubles) and another villain(which is later revealed in the movie) on a weapons smuggling operation,they also put a
bounty
on the Batwoman.
This film deals with the Irish rebellion in the 1920s and more specifically one man's life after he informs on a friend for the
bounty
on his head and the subsequent consequences.
For example, there's one scene where the female
bounty
hunter goes to a travel agency, which is in New York, and the man at the desk is obviously a Brit trying badly to hide his accent.
There's an ex-boyfriend that ultimately has nothing to do with the plot, sexual 'tension' with every single woman on screen and for some reason there are a
bounty
of young, immensely attractive females who want to bang Al Pacino even though he honestly looks like he's about to fall into his coffin throughout the entire film.
"Wanted-Dead or Alive" starred Steve McQueen as
bounty
hunter Josh Randall in what was a very good start to an outstanding acting career in feature films.
The solid cast contribute admirably sincere performances: John D. LeMay makes for a refreshingly unlikely hero as the nerdy Steven Freeman, Kari Keegan likewise impresses as the sweet Jessica Kimble, Steven Williams almost steals the whole show with his colorful portrayal of flamboyant
bounty
hunter Creighton Duke, plus there are neat turns by Erin Gray as the spunky Diana Kimble, Allison Smith as Jessica's cheery gal pal Vicki, Steven Culp as opportunistic TV newscaster Robert Campbell, Billy Green Bush as the hard-nosed Sheriff Ed Landis, and Rusty Schwimmer as feisty, foul-mouthed diner owner Joey B. William Dill's slick cinematography gives the picture a properly moody look.
We never empathixe witth the bad guy and they don't stress enough that Spike is after the
bounty.
The title itself as a
bounty
of different meanings to it.
Cameron Mitchell has a thankless role as a weak-willed
bounty
hunter who seems tough enough until his bluff is called.
One interesting side note - a young John Ashton plays a high school coach who might have "seen something" - he's easily the best actor in the film (and there is plenty of bad acting) but Ashton went on to big hits like Beverly Hills Cop (he's Judge Reinholds, grumpy partner) and Midnight Run (where he's the sleazy
bounty
hunter competing with DeNiro).
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