Depiction
in sentence
303 examples of Depiction in a sentence
They allow Kubrick to give an accurate (or at least are the most accurate)
depiction
of space travel to date.
My personal favorite is the
depiction
of Fox News.
I can just about understand why some people might wish to stress this film's link with the Eighties but I really wouldn't say it's an accurate
depiction
of most peoples' lives in that era - even on the poorest Bradford estates.
The young bombers in London draw a parallel with Clay's hateful
depiction
of modern male.
For a much more accurate and interesting
depiction
about how modernism changed the ranches in Texas, see "Hud" (one of Paul Newman's great performances) or "The Last Picture Show."
"D.W. II" left little to the imagination in its
depiction
of the rape and suicide of Bronson's character's daughter, (a rape and murder of his housekeeper was also shown in disgusting detail).
The
depiction
of the situation certainly seemed to be accurate and believable on all counts, but beyond that the story simply came across as incomplete and the direction of the movie appeared to be uncertain and haphazard.
the
depiction
of the most dangerous patient was an exact copy from Hannibal, also appearance of Togan in the very end is obviously the worst mistake that he could have done in his first movie!
its not violent or horror, but it has the best
depiction
of sasquatch.
Costume drama starring Claudette Colbert and Fred MacMurray isn't stuffy, though neither is it a vivid
depiction
of contagious hysteria.
In its
depiction
of a miserable Milanese underclass, this film was probably quite revealing in its day.
Some would say that it's a right
depiction
of the college world in the US, that the emptiness of the characters serve a purpose and all that jazz but it just makes the whole movie unsubstantial.
Like a latter day Ayn Rand, Bigelow is la major muy macho in her
depiction
in the film of a few tough American hombres stuck in Iraq defusing roadside bombs set by the ruthless, relentless, child-killing Arab terrorists.
'Aspidistra' may not be Orwell's best work, but no-one who reads it can forget its superb
depiction
of poverty.
The film's psychological complexities do give the film merit, yet there's no doubting how unnecessarily exploitive the film is in its
depiction
of nudity and sex.
Completely ridiculous "period" film is only a thin excuse for its extensive, graphic
depiction
of the heroine's affair with "the beast", a monster who supposedly appears every century to rape some women.
That's pretty much what he does, and the film's
depiction
of the beast is really really awful; it's basically a tall guy in a fur suit with a mask and a huge PVC tube for a hard-on that squirts copious amounts of white liquid.
I love the
depiction
of the 30s and 40s in film.
Low budget and a shameful
depiction
of the events which should not be made a joke of, which is really what this movie did.
"Flower of Flesh and Blood" is a more violent and gory
depiction
of fake "snuff" material, but that film also falls flat on the realism level.
The
depiction
of the homeless area way over the top and extremely self indulgent, on a par I fear with the awful beach battle
depiction
in Joe Wrights other disaster Attonment.
The ending - the foster parents adopt Sooner - does not redeem the
depiction
of animal cruelty.
As a practicing Russian historian for many, many years I took exception with YC at almost every turn, and in particular the politically correct
depiction
of her as the boss who single-handed moved Russia into a direction of dominance.
I really wanted to believe that the
depiction
of the young Carlito would be somewhat different, I just couldn't buy it.
Yes I know "talkies" had just been invented for the cinema 2 years earlier when this was produced in 1929 but this film showed that much had to learnt about the art of producing films.It comes over as a filmed "hammy" stage play with the actors melodramatically enunciating their lines,rolling their eyes, using too many pregnant pauses and using gestures more appropriate to silent cinema, which I suppose was normal during the process of educating them to appear more naturalistic on screen.The gaps between lines spoken should have been tightened up during editing as it considerably slows the film.It is now only of interest for Titanic buffs who want to see an early example of this marine accident on film.In next chronological order they could see "Titanic" (1953) A Night to Remember (1958)"Titanic (1997), to see how the cinema's
depiction
of this tragedy as evolved over the years.There have been many documentaries and TV films made including the atrocious "SOS Titanic" (1979) On my version which is a DVD, David McCallum gives the introduction.It was he who played Harold Bride Marconi's junior wireless operator in "A Night to Remember"(still the best feature film - please read my "Tribute to Walter" comments on IMDb under Howard Morley.demon.co.uk)and gave the commentary on the series of 4 videos entitled "End of a Dream" so he was well qualified to give the narration.Of more interest I found was a recording accompanied by actual photos of the 1912 US Senate hearing which is also on the DVD.Actors speak the actual words spoken by Lightoller 2nd officer, J Bruce Ismay,Managing director of White Star, Harold Bride and others including Gloria Stewart (The "old Rose" in Titanic 1997) whose voice is used for one of the first class women survivors.
I guess any
depiction
of profligate people can be considered "social commentary."
"Heartland" is a wonderful
depiction
of what it was really like to live on the frontier.
This is a great
depiction
of real events that shows how "mob rule" is not a figment of the imagination.
The great lion attack has never been duplicated, and the horror is well implied with character reactions more so than a modern gore movie would do with graphic
depiction.
The
depiction
of them is hilarious, especially Verbal, the jester, who has two marvelous scenes.
Back
Next
Related words
Movie
Accurate
Would
Which
Their
Great
About
Story
Realistic
Could
Never
People
Years
There
Really
Character
Young
Scenes
Interesting
First