Describes
in sentence
450 examples of Describes in a sentence
Alternately depressing and uproarious, THE HOSPITAL features some of the most acid-tinged dialog imaginable (note how Scott
describes
his love making session with Rigg).
She has gotten used to life without men since most of them are off at war, and as a successful Martha Stewart like columnist, she writes a homey column in which she
describes
her country home as the camera pans over what it really is.
i think the title of the movie
describes
it well.
Borowski in his books
describes
inhuman life in the Nazi camps from the point of view vorarbeiter Tadek - porte parole of author who also was on the privileged position among the prisoners.
He
describes
the human history as the endless chain of exploitation and humiliation.
This movie
describes
to those who don't care the reality of a large part of current world governments.
For starters and for the record, the term "Necromancy
" describes
the black magic art of bringing the dead back to life and it does NOT, in any way, relate to having sex with cadavers.
(The following may look like a spoiler, but it really just
describes
a large class of movies) There is the passionate, wise main character, his goofy but well-meaning sidekick with his ill-placed attempts at humorous comments, the initially-hostile but soon softened gorgeous lady who triggers the inevitable "unlikely" love story, the loved ones taken hostage, and of course the careless evil adversary with his brutal minions.
That pretty much
describes
everyone in the movie at some point.
One of the characters
describes
Richard E Grant's character as "a whining little turd" and unfortunately this sums him up perfectly.
This film
describes
the experiences of a couple of hit men (one of them Burt Reynolds), a prostitute, and two drag queens over the interval of a few hours on one night in Miami.
Running only 27 minutes long, it
describes
a spaceship of gay blacks that come to Earth to free the men from women.
The only new addition to these parts is a voice over that pointlessly
describes
exactly what we can see with our own eyes.
Debbie has just hit town, become a stewardess, slept with an elderly rich man(who she
describes
is in his 50's but obviously hit that mark a decade or two ago), shoots nude scenes for a photographer she just met, and then is the central element to a kidnapping/extortion plot.
Two words
describes
it - stupid and insulting, and again it's way too 90ish sounding.
Unfunny is not a real word but it best
describes
the humor in this video.
Even the box
describes
the film inaccurately.
The IMDb plot summary in no way
describes
the essence of this film.
First let me state that I do not believe in god (if you want to use the word atheist, fine, but I don't like that word since it
describes
what I'm not, not what I am) but I hated this "documentary."
It
describes
an incident in which the young Modesty (17 in the book, mid twenties in the film)asserts her leadership in a war over a casino.
Amateurism best
describes
the film adaptation of the best-selling philosophical novel "The Celestine Prophecy", which follows the spiritual awakening of an out of work teacher in a mysterious village in Peru.
The voice-over
describes
the movie as surreal.
Like all her films, 'Bonjour tristesse' suffers not at all from her looks (though she is perhaps the first of those modern women whom Tom Wolfe gleefully, accurately
describes
as "boys with breasts": publicists, of course, use the word "gamine") but suffers grievously from Seberg's dull, monotonous, killing voice.
That fact probably
describes
Norwegian race relations in general.
Anyway it
describes
perfectly the people in Spain.
For example, although the poet clearly
describes
Etzel as a heathen (which is Kriemhild's main concern as Rudiger tries to persuade her to marry him), when she gets to Hunland, the first thing she does is go to mass.
Perhaps the best Isabel Allende's book, House of the Spirits
describes
an alternative chilean history, this one full of magic, a mystic veil, plus some kind of omnipresent sadness.
Needless to say he is rather eager to begin his work, but unpacking he finds his binoculars have been damaged in transit, so he asks the Squire for a replacement pair, The Squire who is a modern thinking man but also it would seem rather uncultured with such matters, is also eager to get rid of the clutter around the house, so he obliges and walks Fanshawe to the top of the hill so that he can survey the estate and the surrounding villages, there the Squire directs him to points of interest, including Gallows Hill, where locals were hung for their crimes and misdemeanours, his interest is also taken by a local abbey which the Squire
describes
as a ruin, but Fanshawe can see through the binoculars that it clearly isn't, he investigates further and pays a visit to the site of the abbey and is shocked to find that there are but a few stone remnants?
Radiofreccia
describes
a generation, it
describes
life in a small village near Correggio (hometown of Ligabue, the singer who wrote the book that inspired the movie), it
describes
life of young people and their problems relating to the world.
(Danny Peary, in his book "Cult Movies," quite accurately
describes
Mary Woronov's performance as an "evil Eve Arden.")
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