Criminals
in sentence
581 examples of Criminals in a sentence
In addition, the majority of screen time is a far below standard story of thieves,
criminals
and our hero(es) dealing with some alien time travel artifacts.
The plot simply focuses on two
criminals
(Nero and Savalas) who kidnap a young kid (Oliver).
Here the effect is to have stories of American
criminals
in the 20's and 30's (Dillinger, Pretty Boy Floyd, Bonnie and Clyde, etc)inter-cut with each other as a narrator talks about how the FBI hunted them down.
The more brave thing to do in a situation like the one that happens to her- getting brutally beaten along with her fiancée who doesn't live another day from it- is to go after the
criminals
without resorting to a total distorted view of society.
There is, of course, the smugness of the
criminals
as they think that they are immune from the killer's guest list.
The picture starts with the police infinity roaming space looking for I guess
criminals.
As I recall, Savalas and Testi played two criminals, the former a raging maniac who, in one stomach-churning scene, casually sent a German family to their deaths by nudging their trailer off a cliff, thereby plunging to the wilderness depths below.
All these changes and several other aspects make it more than obvious that Michael Winner and Charles Bronson reduced their "Death Wish" success to being a purely brainless and exploitative action series, with a death toll that gigantically increases with each episode, armory that becomes more and more explosive and
criminals
that get nastier, sleazier, meaner and a lot harder to kill.
The plot is about an amnesty that the governor of New Mexico gives to all willing
criminals
to provide them a chance to start a new life.
Well, those
criminals
guilty of making this series probably wanted to show how to make a total opposite of the porcelain-cat holding a red rose.
It never rises above a glorification of weak-minded violent
criminals
and individuals from all walks of life.
It's about a theater troupe who sail to a burial island, consisting of dead criminals, where they plan to conjure some evil forces and resurrect some corpses...
The lead characters do not have names, are anonymous, and maybe his intention is to tell that in the breast of a neighbor family in your building may have drug dealers; or that drug dealers may also have families and may be loving persons; or that there are many dirty cops, probably worse than the criminals; or is it a simple apology to crime?
Hang up the phone"(sic) "Jesse got a sh-t load o' drug money, you can't go involving the cops"(sic) "I'm not so sure stealing money from
criminals
is a crime.
This is a great low budget B&W film of the late 1930's, however, it is very interesting to see how
criminals
used their talents to steal money from insurance companies with false claims during this particular time frame.
That is Ab Tak 56 (56 symbolises how many
criminals
the lead "Sadhu Agashe" has killed" - well you already know that bit)Brilliance exudes Nan Patekar in the role as a relaxed and calculating Indian cop.
A dangerous psychopathic killer Jacob Goodnight is holed up in the abandoned and rotting Blackwell Hotel,alone with his nightmares until eight teenage delinquents show up for community service duty along with the cop who wounded Jacob four years ago.When one of their own is kidnapped by the killer and her fate uncertain,the remaining petty
criminals
must fight for their lives..."See No Evil" was directed by the porno filmmaker Gregory Dark and it stars WWE superstar Kane as remorseless psychopath.The supporting cast is terrible and there are no surprises to be found here,but there is enough extreme violence and gore for slasher fans to enjoy.Overall,I liked this film and you should too,if you are into mindless slasher flicks.Sure,it's cliché,but who cares.7 out of 10.
Moreover, the fine line distinguishing cops from
criminals
gets chillingly blurred in this picture: the titular squad use harsh, brutish and morally dubious strong-arm tactics as a means to an end for enforcing the law and there's certainly no code of honor amongst the thugs and thieves who populate the seedy urban underbelly that's vividly depicted in this movie.
Many of the
criminals
and secondary figures are really just stereotypes in motion.
Better than average World War II-era "who-dun-it" featuring Warner Baxter as a former gangster who suffered amnesia and has been reborn as a psychiatrist now known as Robert Ordway who helps both the police and
criminals
who want to go straight.
But this is not the best part of Oz; the characters are the strongest point of this show; they're all excellent and not annoying, despite the fact we are looking at brutal
criminals.
As a rule, they did not "patrol" but exercised warrants on
criminals
only.
Normally, people who are dead stay dead, just as normally it is the
criminals
who are locked up rather than the victims.
The story is this: In the beginning of the movie detective Mitch (Robert DeNiro) and another detective go into a tv store trying to bust some
criminals.
In swedish media the demonstrators where pictured as
criminals
that stood for anarchy and violence.
They get the job done in their own way without anything being leaked to the press, and this gives them a freedom to expand their means of getting to the
criminals
most working detectives and policeman just can not nab.
In America, there are so many movies that describe condemned
criminals
or jails.
I like the formula where there is an elaborate crime, the killer(s) totally underestimate Columbo, and then you get their realization that Columbo was totally playing the
criminals.
The rarest feat for US filmmakers seems to be the hero-centered purposeful anti-crime film or TV series; I remind the viewer how mightily "Cain's Hundred"'s and "Hardcastle and McCormick"'s and even "the Untouchables'"' producers had to work to produce anything but episodes devoted largely to the unfictional activities of
criminals
rather than those of their ethical opponents.
The technique is essentially the same, or at least very similar, in this film detailing on the one hand a trial of dissidents in California in the (apparently) near future, and on the other the attempts of a group of convicted
"criminals"
to slog through 50 miles of desert to win their freedom in a government-run "punishment park" as an alternative to prison.
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