Claims
in sentence
2112 examples of Claims in a sentence
Although the story may seem slightly farfetched (the two boys attempt to river-raft several hundred miles to find a doctor who
claims
to have the cure to AIDS), the emotion, actions and interactions of all characters involved are tragically close to real life.
He starts investigating the
claims
by a woman that she regularly hears a baby crying in the house next door, yet there is no baby there, apart from a middle aged woman and her son.
After interviewing a woman who
claims
to hear loud baby's cries coming from the house next door (where there is no baby), Kobayashi heads over to talk to the neighbor.
Soon after, he's approached by a Dr. Price, an expert in Electronic Voice Phenomena (EVP), who
claims
he's been receiving messages from Jonathan's departed wife Anna via sundry electronic gadgets.
Russell can't quite convince when she
claims
never to have been in a gymnasium, but is otherwise rather wonderful.
So Guttenberg, honest citizen that he is, when he discovers that another woman was attacked and killed nearby only half an hour later, comes forward and
claims
to have witnessed the first attack, merely intending to pass on the information given to him by Huppert.
The Invisible Maniac starts as a young Kevin Dornwinkle (Kris Russell) is caught by his strict mother (Marilyn Adams) watching a girl (Tracy Walker) strip through his telescope... Cut to 'Twenty Years Later' & Kevin Dornwinkle (Noel Peters) is now a physics professor who
claims
to have discovered a way to turn things invisible using a 'mollecular reconstruction' serum.
The film
claims
to be based on a true story but in effect, it does not even come close to what actually happened to "Buddy" - who in real life, was the famous Gargantua, sold to Ringling Bros. by our supposed "heroic" Gertrude Lintz, known by many animal enthusiasts as a woman who hardly had her animals' welfare in the best interest.
It is strange to learn that Toby Young was actually involved a lot in the writing of the script (as he
claims
himself in the post script of the book).
WhyteFox who wrote a comment on here
claims
this is a true story.He or she believes in ghosts and spirits and says there is a haunted boat in the area this movie was filmed.There was no mention in this movie about it being a true story.I have never experienced something like that personally but am not saying it's impossible.I guess if anyone is interested in renting this movie,do it at your own risk.If you like amateur student horror films you may like this.
The local homicide division of Big City, USA is also investigating, though most of his work comes by the way of oogling the CD ROMs which he
claims
are as realistic "as the real thing".
If this is all the Watchowski's have to offer in terms of a back story to the Matrix, than I really have to question the
claims
of all of the fans who believe that the movies are intended to register on a deeper level.
She then catches him cheating on her and divorces him...but lets him keep the kid she
claims
to love.
Granted, it could be a movie against addiction, but there are a lot fewer people who died taking Dungeons and Dragons to far in its entire existence than than say what drunk driving
claims
in like a month.
In Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer, you can see her
claims
about the police and being controlled by radio waves are ridiculous, yet she is so troubled, she really believes them to be true.
Instead, with his film, he judges them constantly, talking about them as 'cretins', again and again, dramatizing the action, setting-up scenes to create the spectacle, all of this very unacceptable for a documentarist which
claims
to work for an all-mighty objectivity.
Is there some Christian code of honor that mandates that since Bush
claims
he, too, is called by God, that all Christians must cover up his ignorance by mispronouncing that word the same way he does?
Also amusing is the film's chief nasty critic, who at one point
claims
that he despises the hero's pin up art because "women like that don't exist" to which our heroine replies with an assurance that the critic just doesn't get out enough.
Earl
claims
that his confession to the crime was obtained under duress by a sadistic police officer and that the real murderer is Blair Sullivan, a serial killer already under sentence of death for several other murders.
It really boggles my mind when someone comes across a movie like this and
claims
it to be one of the worst slasher films out there.
His wife, Sophia (Helen Mirren) wars openly with the head of his movement Chertkov (Paul Giamatti), who she
claims
in his efforts to convince Tolstoy to sign the rights to his works over to the Russian people is trying to steal the wealth that is owed to her upon her husbands imminent death.
Mississip's character ranks among one of the worst stereotypes I have ever witnessed - his accent is terribly exaggerated (and incorrect, according to which part of Mississippi he
claims
to hail from), and whenever he does deliver a line, it's several decibels higher than any other cast member.
Bradford Dillman plays a scientist who wakes up one morning in the middle of a bloody crime scene; having partial amnesia (or "global amnesia", which one character
claims
to define as elective loss of memory), the scientist finds a private detective in the phone book in the hopes of piecing his life back together.
Fatty's wife is tired of all his heavy drinking, so she takes him to a sanitarium where a psychiatrist (Keaton)
claims
to have a guaranteed cure!
If this movie was horrible with all those
claims
I wonder just how lame the "UN-Killer Cut" was???
What you see on screen is a bad joke at best, a gimmick on the part of the filmmaker, and it pains you to see what little regard he actually shows for a film he
claims
he's been a fan of all his life.I've seen several bad films over the years, but I can't remember one that's been as much of a torture to sit through as this one.
No-one
claims
to have heard of it but it's definitely there & the family decide to take a detour in order to check it out & take some pictures.
The "Trivia" page on IMDb
claims
the filmmakers protested because this film was re-cut by the studio to "simplify the plot".
Later, the Savage family
claims
Alex as a compensation for their lost son.
His
claims
about radiation, shielding, star photography, and others lead me to believe is he extremely ignorant or has some sort of ax to grind against NASA, the astronauts, or American in general.
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