Certain
in sentence
5192 examples of Certain in a sentence
One thing these movies have taught us for
certain
is this, if you're brown and growing up in America, you have a harder time assimilating into the mass culture then lighter skinned people.
I watch a lot of mainstream films, watch a
certain
scene or shot and say, "That's really cool!" Yet I think to myself, that's impossible to do on a low-budget.
You loved characters from a
certain
film and wanted to see them again, or the original film left some open ends you'd like to see tied up.
One of my complaints lies in the making of the movie, wherein
certain
parts are made to look like a video game, so you're never sure if you're seeing a game or the movie.
The ending did not produce any
certain
answers for the family involved.The viewer can decide whether the family will make it through the heartache and hurt that all of them are experiencing.This movie was very well done,and is very tender and touching.I recommend this movie very much.I have this movie.
But on a
certain
level, there's a weird, voyeuristic pleasure to be gained from seeing so many good actors struggling with such awful material.
Grieco although aging was really fantastic and we all know how well a
certain
topless actress in this film, Maggie Q, has done since.
Wolfie and his comrades were a magnificent creation depicting urban unrest in the UK with humour, pathos and with a
certain
amount of sincerity in the beliefs that society should be changed.
I am
certain
the violin masters' heart was breaking as he applied the colour.
People have no where to turn, they have no tutors, no credible religious mentors, so they undertake the journey on their own and end up with loveless sex and the inevitable next step, a slow, but certain, death.
Timmy himself spouts sexist attempts at humour 'What a knocker factory!' with such aplomb, there is a
certain
weird genius to Askwith's performance.
To a
certain
level, it was enjoyable, but not very good.
Once upon a time there was this sincere, but painfully dated, hippie era melodrama called SUNBURST about life and love and the importance of getting back to nature to find yourself... Then comes the video boom era of the 1980s and a rising star emerging in the horror genre for playing a
certain
facially-scarred predator who kills teenagers in their sleep.
There is some cheese and then there's some ham (in fact there is no shortage of ham in this film) and then there's some chicken when
certain
persons lose their courage and then there's some lettuce to brighten and pretty things up a bit, and then there's the daily bread, it's all there.
It is perfectly comprehensible that in converting a book into a film,
certain
aspects become altered.
There will always be deviations from perhaps the original idea, and of course
certain
literary concepts will be lost.
I'm fairly
certain
that if I was given a typewriter with 6 keys and 20 minutes, my script of Locusts would have been better.
There's a
certain
sort of militaristic, maladjusted creep -- I've met a few in my time -- who's fascinated by Nazis to the point of idolatry.
I thought to myself "maybe it's just misunderstood to those unfamiliar with Ellroy's novel" But frankly, it just never felt right,,, and then it went more and more uncomfortably wrong; the actors in their roles, the soundtrack vs.
certain
scenes, the story fumbling it's way around with not enough mention of The Dahlia herself (which really drove the characters in the novel).
First off, this is a kids movie so
certain
allowances should be made for its rubbishness.
But whereas stuff like "The Amazing Colossal Man" (a man turned giant by atomic testing) and "Beginning of the End" (Peter Graves vs. giant grasshoppers) had a
certain
charm reflective of the 1950s' "high- concept/low-budget" brand of sci-fi, "Empire of the Ants" is a bottom-feeder from start to finish, trying desperately to capture the low-grade magic of a bygone era.
Unfortunately, the movie is a bit too ambitious for it's own good and leaves you thinking "huh?" in
certain
parts, but overall, I'd recommend this to anyone who likes psychological horror.
the strange thing is that i can't keep myself from suggesting
certain
people see it.
I found myself rolling my eyes at at every line coming out of more than a few characters, and the impossible stubbornness of a character towards
certain
situations was likable to them needing a person to fly by way of flapping their arms, and not taking no as an answer.
I thought this was a true original and it made me break out in a sweat at
certain
points.
This is all I really wanted to say about the film, however, since I need more lines, I'll just say
certain
aspects of the movie are alternately funny, sad, strange and still relevant today.
A
certain
letter is all Mazarin needs to keep Louis under his control.
From my kindred youth, I remember
certain
episodes from 'Gallery', but the quick, 'fillers' the series put in were sometimes bizarre, but welcome.
"The Long Good Friday" isn't a portrait of the history of a
certain
mob family, but a tight and cohesive story detailing a few days in the life of a head mobster.
Certain
parts of the dialogue were unnecessary and were probably added to the film just to trigger shock from the audience.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
There
Would
Their
About
Could
People
Other
Should
Movie
Things
Thing
While
Almost
Being
World
Might
Where
Countries
Point