Deals
in sentence
1132 examples of Deals in a sentence
This movie starts out with Lincoln's assassination and it also
deals
with an Indian war.
This movie also
deals
with Custer's last stand and is far from accurate.
Not much to say about it except that it
deals
with a rarely touched topic in films of beastiality.
The story takes place in a fictional state, but obviously it
deals
with the murder of Kennedy.
A movie which
deals
with the the ability to dare, to face fear - especially fear passed down from parental figures - and overcome it and, in doing so, embrace life's possibilities, is a film to be treasured and savoured.
It
deals
so gently and subtly not only with Aids (which is only alluded) and gay life, but also with old age, dying and death.
But don't get me wrong, this heterogeneity of the genres the movie
deals
with, adds veracity to the experience this rich movie offers to its spectators.
The story is interesting and
deals
with time traveling.
The Ring was made from the only screenplay Hitchcock wrote himself and it deals, as many of his earliest pictures do, with a love triangle.
This movie
deals
with one of the most feared geriatric diseases among the aging today.
The movie
deals
with a New York widow (Cher) who falls in love with her boyfriend's (Danny Aiello) angry brother (Nicholas Cage) who works at a bakery.
Robert Carlyle plays Hitler during his later years, during this documentary that only
deals
with Hitler from boyhood until he became Chancellor of Germany, including The Night of the Long Knives.
Denis is in no hurry to move the action along, and we must patiently build our understanding of Louis from his daily activities and the few people he
deals
with along the frontier including a son, Sidney (Grégoire Colin, almost unrecognizable with long hair and a wisp of a mustache) who rejects him as a "lunatic":, shown as a dedicated father of two.
More than any movie I has ever seen, the film
deals
with burdening sexuality and ego in a way that is completely human, never dull, and flushed in the kind of inherent goodness of youth that is discolored by the fear-frenzied adult world where any quirk in youth is accredited to anything from insanity to perversion.
Alain Delon of "The Godson" is appropriately laconic as he methodically
deals
out death to the heads of the mob families who refused to let him retire so that he could enjoy life with his young son and daughter.
Like another reviewer said, this movie is not a heavy melodrama, but it
deals
with harsh realities.
The film
deals
with issues of loyalty, love and, perhaps most importantly, how people deal with adversity, both their own and that of others in their immediate environment.
This is because anything that
deals
with Christianity and Satan is considered offensive and must be immediately pulled from TV.
This one
deals
with the effects and trauma that the survivors must endure.
Bad things have been unleashed and the general course of the film is a look at how the quest for self knowledge and ultimate therapy brings horror to patients, healers and others and the film is loaded with smart visual clues to the power of the dark forces with which it deals, dark forces unbound by time, place or even personality.
The way the movie
deals
the issue is quite interesting: not in the woman's point of view or from God's perspective (in this way, there would be lots of grass growing, clouds flying views, I suppose).
Overall, I recommend this movie and if you enjoy the topic of school aggression and violence and learning more about it, I also suggest the documentary "It's a Girls World" put out by CBC in 2004, which
deals
with the topic of social bullying, comparing and contrasting two groups of girls one in Montreal, Quebec and the other in Victoria, British Columbia, the group of friends and acquaintances of Dawn Marie Wellesley a 14 year old girl who killed herself after being brutally bullied.
Of course it is a denunciation of the foolish
deals
you can get to on the Internet.
This film
deals
with the Irish rebellion in the 1920s and more specifically one man's life after he informs on a friend for the bounty on his head and the subsequent consequences.
It
deals
with pretty adult themes --- gambling, murder, hell and prison but in a world of goody-goody Disney films, it's something every child should watch once.
It
deals
with darkness and pain and loss, but there is hope.
Victor, a cocky teen, but with a good heart at the end
deals
with love in all the right places dealing with girls and family.
The film
deals
with the dehumanisation of children into killing machines.
It
deals
with members of a rogue group known as the "Poison Clan" who are searching for a treasure hidden by their sifu.
One of the fun bits of information
deals
with Dean Jagger, the actor who plays the title role.
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