Budget
in sentence
5887 examples of Budget in a sentence
Craig Bowlsby, Linden Banks, Sophie Banks, and Brian Oberquell came out to show the video and give a couple of panels on making TV on a shoestring
budget.
Comparisons with Red Dwarf are inevitable, since the first seasons of Red Dwarf were also shot on a low
budget
(although Commander's Log has to set some kind of record for the least amount of money spent per minute of air time), and thus have to make up for the lack of "eye candy" with good writing and acting.
The movie must have had a record breaking low
budget
which I'm sure was wasted almost solely on the movie's cover.
The Danish production crew tried, with a
budget
of about $49, to make a Star Trek-style film about a crew of very gay men traveling about the galaxy wiping out female oppression by killing all the women--like they proceeded to do on the Earth!
Evil Dead set such a high standard for the comedic horror on a
budget
genre, that Scarecrows is simply out of place.
This film is SO bad, so terribly written and hopelessly low
budget
that the ending credits, which show all of the cut scenes where they fumbled their lines, are literally the movie's highlight.
Here's an interesting little movie that strictly gives the phrase "low
budget"
a horrible name.
The location shooting in New York City, and the film's ultra-low budget, gives it a gritty authenticity much like that of the far superior "The Naked City", a shootout in a dark basement is decently handled, and some of the investigating procedures are clever.
Freshmen film makers often bite off more that they, or their budget, can chew.
The best thing they can do is to take a few steps back, reassess what is possible, and work within their limited
budget
the next time out.
It was made by a grindhouse cinema owner for an extreme low
budget.
Low
budget
slasher, executive produced by Charles Band, with gore murders that fail to convince.
You can give JMS and the boys a pass on this one because they were at the beginning of their series and on a small budget, but the movie is still sub-par.
Although utilizing the talents of a superb cast, and produced on a top budget, with suitably moody photography by Robert Planck, the movie fails dismally on the credibility score.
It's more expensive looking than most of director Al Adamson's films but it's not at the same
budget
level that viewers have come to expect from sci-fi films.
This film was so poorly done and executed that even by independent and low
budget
standards it's just plain terrible.
This is probably one of the worst "wanna be a low
budget
hit films" to credit the dinosaur genre.
I spent pretty much the entire movie laughing and when I wasn't laughing I was shaking my head thinking about how a multi-million dollar rock star would want to make a movie that seemed like it was on a
budget
of multi-hundreds of dollars.
This movie had so much potential - a strong cast, a reasonably strong idea and clearly a decent
budget.
The story was not too bad, but with Bogie clearly miscast also, it turned out to be a poor Western that was overlong, and on a low budget, but in fairness, color would not have helped.
The beginning and end credits show along with the most of the actors and the "special effects" that this is a low
budget
movie.
There is nothing in this movie that you could not find in other mad scientist, horror/comedy, or low
budget
movies.
This movie suffers from a low
budget
and it's production values are disturbing.
The cast is made up of attractive looking actors smiling glumly at one another, and the music and photography are lugubrious (a couple of the visual effects are laughable, indie-cliché touches that reek of a puny budget).
This thing is obviously very low
budget
and comes across with the feel of a high school play gone bad.
this movie has no plot, no character development, and no
budget.
My only real complaint that wasn't due to the film's budget, which must have been small, was the contrived "twist" ending.
It has extremely cheap acting and is very low
budget.
The recipe for this movie: take talented actors, rich and beautiful Shakespeare material, and a $1.25
budget.
The Brain (or head) that Wouldn't Die is one of the more thoughtful low
budget
exploitation films of the early 1960s.
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