Credits
in sentence
1184 examples of Credits in a sentence
The
credits
read "introducing" Angelina Jolie, which is not even close to being true, but she is astoundingly beautiful as the Juliet character, and, as always, her acting is wonderful--- and, considering her age at the time, even her dialect is pretty good.
By the way, stay through the
credits
for a final joke with Bob Costas and Al Michaels.
This grips you from the very first frame, and does not let go until the end
credits
start rolling.
Carol Tevis seems to be the high-pitched "Baby Talker" as listed in the
credits
on IMDb.
The setting is established effectively through the opening
credits.
The premise started taking twist and turns I didn't see coming and by the end
credits
I was scrambling through the the in-flight guide to figure out what I had just watched.
I could not tell if it was scripted or how it was shot and waited until the very end to see
credits
and then spent a half an hour on the IMDb to find this film.
Gene was very proud of this movie, and he deserved the
credits
he received from writing "Green Eyes".
Also, what is interesting is the actors in the movie-you would not recognize them if you did not read the
credits.
The opening
credits
make for a brilliant, atmospheric piece of escapist entertainment that's full of little nods to the comic strip.
Opening credits: great.
It weaves an intense web that left me unable to take my eyes off the screen until the closing
credits.
Credits
to the Ecxellent screenplay by Oliver Stone.
That was my first reaction as the opening
credits
ran on the screen.
Jotted down a couple of names from the
credits
and got home to look it up.
It throws the viewer around for an hour and fifty minutes and doesn't let you breathe until the
credits
start to roll at the very end.
A true successor to Tetsuo the Iron Man and Ichi the Killer, this gem starts with a bang and lays the gore on thick until the
credits
roll.
I came in in the middle of this film so I had no idea about any
credits
or even its title till I looked it up here, where I see that it has received a mixed reception by your commentators.
As usual with Preminger, this is a well-crafted movie with a notable opening
credits
sequence and enlivened by a good cast that also includes Karl Malden (as Andrews' incumbent superior), Tom Tully (as Tierney's motor-mouth taxi driver dad) and Neville Brand (as Merrill's chief thug), with notable support also coming from Craig Stevens (as the slimy, wife-beating victim), Bert Freed (as Andrews' sympathetic partner) and Robert F. Nolan (as Andrews' stern outgoing superior).
Set around a peach canning factory in small town Australia, this is a warm gentle, erotic film, and leaves you with a pleasant feeling when the
credits
close.
She is not listed in the
credits.
The eye-opening film is humorous, in-depth, serious, non-patronizing, and it leaves you wanting more as the
credits
role.
This a rip roaring western and i have watched it many times and it entertains on every level.However if your after the true facts about such legends as Hickcock,Cody and Calamity Jane then look elsewhere, as John Ford suggested this is the west when the truth becomes legend print the legend.The story moves with a cracking pace, and there is some great dialogue between Gary Cooper and Jean Arthur two very watchable stars who help to make this movie.The sharp eyed amongst you might just spot Gabby Hayes as an Indian scout, also there is a very young Anthony Quinn making his debut as Cayenne warrior, he actually married one of Demilles daughters in real life.Indeed its Quinns character who informs Cooper of the massacre of Custer told in flash back, the finale is well done and when the
credits
roll it fuses the American west with American history.So please take time out to watch this classic western.
All I can say is that I was speechless when the ending
credits
began to roll.
This film contains more action before the opening
credits
than are in entire Hollywood films of this sort.
Even the opening
credits
and music have that spaghetti feel: Sergio Leone and Ennio Morricone would be proud.
Until half of the film was over we didn't even know the name of this movie because there were no opening
credits
and we went to this sneak viewing, but we sure had a good time.
On another note: I thought the young lover of the episode might be someone who eventually went on to other things -- he looked familiar -- but it seems that "Ron Kipling" disappeared after just two TV
credits
to his name.
The film opens with a shocking statistic so don't miss the opening
credits.
The title sequence shows the
credits
written on a rain-soaked sidewalk as people trod on it; music is provided by someone whistling Alfred Newman's "Street Scene."
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