Depression
in sentence
1157 examples of Depression in a sentence
Various believable doctors try their best to pin a diagnose on her ether wanting to go with possession or latent massive
depression.
She works in a diner, and when she tries to forget her lousy life in the
Depression
she turns to the movies.
In the worst years of the depression, the most popular stars were not the most glamorous or attractive.
It turns out that the affluent Nestor is, ironically, Marcus's only potential ally in his descent into
depression
and madness, but his offer of help may come too late.
This movie should actually carry a government health warning! ( This film can cause serious manic
depression
for the hour and half of your life )
Our Professor, who, never leaves his downtrodden, filthy household is a representation of the stultifying damage that can occur during severe
depression.
Day's bright, cheerful, optimistic, happy persona gradually gives way to
depression
and alcoholism brought on by the demands of a small-time hood who gains control of the singer's professional and personal life.
Ranging from pedophilia, rape, masturbation, deep depression, to the spiting of the mentally handicapped, amongst other subjects.
A very predictable, sentimental movie about a pedantic cop whose strict adherence to the letter of the law results in Bogart turning to crime to support his family during the
Depression.
This movie can absolutely cause a
depression
for the rest of your weekend.
Years before he made Everyone Says I Love You, which was also a big 30's Hollywood homage, Purple Rose of Cairo was a nifty take on the separation between fantasy and reality (or as one of my friends calls 'magic realism') and how it relates to the
depression
and the escapism inherent in those fluffy romantic adventures.
They fall into
depression
which can lead to dangerous eating disorders and cosmetic surgeries simply because of what society portrays.
It was about this family during the great
depression
who struggle with farm life.
In the
Depression
era of the thirties this would probably have been regarded by most Americans as a good living wage, but it is not enough to keep Carolyn in the middle-class style to which she has become accustomed.
In Fritz Lang's second American movie, 1937's "You Only Live Once" (not twice), Sylvia Sidney, aka "the Face of the Depression," plays what must be the loyalist girlfriend/wife in screen history.
He was subject to severe mood swings, possibly even manic
depression
but remained an honourable man.
It seems farfetched because many people were still struggling after the
depression.
That fiction drives the film and the very plot of having a leading actor (a dashing Jeff Daniels pre-Dumb & Dumber- we can understand how Michael Keaton got the boot from Woody, seriously) walk off the screen literally and romanticize an ordinary down-trodden, abused waitress in
depression
era New Jersey (played elegantly by Mia Farrow pre documentary expose- we can't understand how Soon Yi got the loot from Woody, seriously) is simply spell-binding as a plot line.
Instead, Sherman's March is an incredibly patient and passionate examination of oneself, the pain and frustration that come with mid-life depression, and the quasi-comic mystery surrounding Southern culture.
Released in 1932, Grand Hotel must have been a wonderful escape for those living through the
depression.
Mia Farrow stars as Celia, a
depression
era housewife, trapped in a dead end marriage to a pig (Danny Aiello) whose only escape comes from going to the movies.
His war experiences tormented him the rest of his life with constant insomnia,
depression
and anxiety.
In a sense, the loneliness, impossible dreams, and searing heartaches of the many drifting, unfulfilled, and lost characters are the real heart of this story, which thus embodies the pain of the
Depression
in the personal lives of several people who suffer, suffer, and, well, suffer.
Set during the depression, this is like Homeward Bound but with people.
There is also enough action to satisfy kids and adults, and the film is effective especially in conveying the harsh realities of children living in the
depression.
Her
depression
not only made me laugh, but almost cry.
In the grim year of 1932, with Warner Bros. losing money like all the major studios except MGM (RKO and Paramount both went into receivership thanks to the Depression), along comes the movie One Way Passage, dealing with what seems are the petty cares of grifters on a Pacific cruise.
The Psychologist Elizabeth Kubler-Ross highlights five stages of the typical mourning process: denial and isolation, anger, bargaining,
depression
and acceptance.
While I thought Elisabeth Shue did a wonderful performance of a new mother going through the anxiety of post par-tum depression, the supporting actors were not as engaging.
The fact is that this "comedy" doesn't even attempt to be a comedy for the last half of the movie and instead veers sharply into melodramatic commentary on the inequities of
depression
age America, and the misguided way in which the upper-class views the lower.
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