Criminal
in sentence
1373 examples of Criminal in a sentence
In 2003, in the Longview State Correctional Facility, the
criminal
Marcus Wright (Sam Worthington) that is in the death row is convinced by the cancerous Dr. Serena Kogan (Helena Bonham Carter) to donate his body to her research and he accepts.
The second is that he tells the story of a conflicted
criminal
trafficking in some mean streets and he does it without ripping off Scorsese for one second.
I saw the
Criminal
on Palm Pictures VOD and i must say, while at first I was skeptical, I thought it was a fantastic movie that unwounded perfectly with many twists and turns along the way.
He drove around the coolest car, all the women loved him, and he was a master of dodging in and out of precarious
criminal
situations in an effortless and likable way!
Basically a group of average looking young women decide to eliminate all the perverted and
criminal
men in town including naughty corrupt town mayor.
People after the worst
criminal
activity is gone, want to have a more peaceful and less visible law-enforcing police force.
The story concerns a villain known as The Gorilla, who may be a human
criminal
or really an escaped ape no one seems to know for certain one way or the other, threatening the life of one Walter Stevens (Atwill), who hires three bumbling detectives (The Ritz Brothers) to protect him.
The story is not really Award-worthy - young, brilliant
criminal
buries the wife of a rich man to get some money, and then he gets interrogated by a female cop.
It is my understanding that the film tried to demonstrate that smart sentences may be the best way to face a
criminal.
Normally those gangsters are unable to understand why their lives are so spoiled or why they behave in that way, so with a bit of smartly said words- and that's what Howard did with Bogart- the
criminal
may reflect a bit of what he is doing or may become lost in his misdemeanours.
But Sylvia is all forgiveness, and even takes it on the lam with him in her gravid condition, in one of Hollywood's earliest instances of
criminal
lovers on the lam...a genre that would later produce such classics as "They Live By Night" (1949), "Gun Crazy" (1949), "Badlands" (1973) and, of course, 1967's "Bonnie and Clyde."
As the Grim Reaper gets ever closer to calling his number, former defense secretary and mass murderer Robert McNamara sits down in front of a camera and admits he could be considered a war
criminal.
Maybe a war
criminal?
Here's a news flash for you, Mac, you are a war
criminal.
He's on a North Sea oil platform where Lou Kramer, a clever
criminal
(Anthony Perkins) who has hijacked the supply boat Esther which is moored below, has demanded 25 million British pounds or he'll blow the rig sky high.
Policewoman Lacy Bond,played by small dynamic redhead Sondra Currie,is a "supercop" assigned to take down a band of female gangsters who are up to all sorts of fiendish
criminal
activities.She uses(pretty basic)martial arts skills against them,and is later joined by undercover agent Pam Harris,played by Jeanie Bell,to help her take down the bad girl mob.The guys are generally pretty unimportant in this movie.Tony Young,as Lacy's boss and partner is reduced to a hapless sidekick,muttering his disapproval when he thinks she is putting herself in danger(and at one point having to be rescued by our heroine from some murderous babes who are beating him to death!).Only Phil Hoover,playing a funny and pretty vicious villain,and the great William Smith,sending himself up in a cameo as a patronizing police fight instructor,really register among the male cast.This cheap but entertaining movie contains all the elements expected from Lee Frost's "drive-in" fare,some sex and nudity,scantily clad girls,and lots of action.Fans of female fighting in movies should like the scenes where Lacy and Pam use judo and karate battling the female villains-such as tough con Janette(Laurie Rose)and bikini bimbo thugs Caroline(Dorrie Thomson)and her gang.
Terry Dean is an exceptional career criminal, after his release from prison he is hit by a car saving a young boy.
The agency is looking for the
criminal
mastermind, who has a t-shaped scar on the right side of his face.
Although Cary Grant is justifiably remembered as a screen legend (indeed he was probably the most adept of any of his contemporaries at romantic comedy), it seems
criminal
that Irene Dunne is almost forgotten these days.
Where some steal and take the
criminal
way out to survive, others survive by doing what is right (and harder - as characterized by Harumi's speech to Murakami about the dress from Yusa).
Even in this world, the
criminal
is not truly ruthless.
This is exactly what I'd do if my gang's territory was being threatened by conspiracy and rivalry in the
criminal
underworld - hide out on a nice beach playing fantastic-looking firework and sumo games with me mates and some random passing woman, listening to crazy old men singing in incredible voices, watching out for assassins in fishing gear and generally building myself up for a massive showdown.
Lon Chaney (as Alonzo the Armless) is a
criminal
posing as an armless circus knife-wielder; he amazes by throwing knives with his feet, notably at assistant Joan Crawford (as Nanon Zanzi).
I can almost understand polygamy for religious reasons (while recognizing the welfare fraud, statutory rape, and other associated
criminal
acts that commonly accompany this lifestyle), but this pig of a human openly states that his polygamy has nothing to do with religion - just his inability to keep his organ in his pants.
Written by Ed Wood of Plan 9 fame, this film centers on a group of girls who run around doing all sorts of
criminal
shenanigans.
And his & Terry Farrell's parenting on the plane were
criminal.
Everything, and I mean everything about
"Criminal"
is totally contrived.
On the loose again after escaping from prison, Tritignant, known as "the Swiss" for his precision and his habit of working alone (?) is a suave
criminal
who avoids capture and carries out a successful kidnapping (in which he does not at all work alone but has three or four accomplices).
The plotlines follow the model of the 1950s horror pulp comics, with characters spoiling for their comeuppance: a black-sheep nephew suffers a revenge beyond the grave after murdering his rich uncle; a ruthless blind woman blackmails a surgeon into performing a transplant using the eyes of a desperate bum; a war
criminal
finds what he thinks is respite from his pursuers when he is miraculously transported into a museum painting.
The movie relates the story of a young man's rise in the
criminal
underworld in prohibition-era urban America.
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