Dialogue
in sentence
3121 examples of Dialogue in a sentence
The
dialogue
is ghastly, the horror effects are laughable.
A grade-Z horror filmmaker Carl Monson was one of the most prolific directors operating within the field of the low-budget gory mayhem.His movies are full of inept gore,laughable acting,boring sub-plots and woeful dialogue.A mysterious black clad figure is savagely murdering guests staying at the family mansion.Unfortunately this film is almost bloodless.You don't actually see the murders except with shadows and a few blood splatters.The pace is lethargic and the plot is rather uninteresting.The acting is merely competent,but the lack of gore and mutilation left me disappointed.A generous 4 out of 10.Just beware:do not mistake Monson's film with Andy Milligan's equally weak "Legacy of Blood".
This film style can be best defined as expressionist in nature, using an improvisational method of
dialogue
to illicit a "more pronounced depth of meaning and truth".
I kept expecting them to look down at their palms during the longer
dialogue
scenes in order to read cheat lines.
Director Douglas Sirk has the entire cast overact their way through
dialogue
that felt forced and the end result was a waste of 99 minutes.
Stale dialogue, underdeveloped and flat characters and a disjointed storyline are only part of the problems with this gangster classic wannabe.
A setting ripe with atmosphere and possibility (an abandoned convent) is squandered by a stinker of a script filled with clunky, witless
dialogue
that's straining oh-so-hard to be hip.
The dialogue, particularly the romantic dialogue, is terrible.
Interesting first half with some engaging, terse
dialogue
among dubious characters in a late-night bar.
There is no plot and the
dialogue
is monotonous.
But it compensates with crackling
dialogue
and psychological tension.
Direction is not well done at as scenes and
dialogue
are out-of-place.
Soft For Digging has a diminutive
dialogue
which reflects the majority of the scenes of the film, an old man living by himself in a house.
The limited
dialogue
was not a problem.
We are given very little information on his character or who is paying him to kill, indeed the episode is notable for having no
dialogue
at all.
Instead of quirky, noir-esquire characters acting in hard-boiled fashion, you simply recognize it immediately for what it is: a bunch of talented but miscast actors, brooding and raising their eyebrows while reading bizarre
dialogue
without a hint of relevant context.
Cringe-inducing
dialogue
at places.
Trying too hard to be terrifying, lacking good
dialogue
even any fear for that matter really makes The Screaming Skull more like A Snoring Dull.
It also features some of the worst
dialogue
I've ever heard... like this little gem... Guy tells girl "You smell like the moon.".
One either likes it very much, applauding its sincerity, its liberal point of view and fine acting, or else loathes its obvious propaganda, mediocre dialogue, cardboard characters and overall tendentiousness.
Her characters are unreal, and while her ear for
dialogue
shows a certain facility for the way people talk she possesses no real brilliance or originality.
When Scrooge was at his meanest, you don't get the sense Scott is saying the
dialogue
with much conviction and when he undergoes his metamorphosis he is similarly unconvincing.
I instead saw a miserable attempt at
dialogue
in a supposed kung fu movie.
That's a snippet of choice
dialogue
delivered by the evil, ballbusting lady assistant of a famous scientist to her prim maid just before she lures three incredibly dumb college girls to a mansion for behavior modification experiments.
For one thing the
dialogue
is poorly developed, it's boring and wastes too much time on trivial details, the acting is bad, et cetera.
Doubt mixes excellent acting and plenty of tension and suspense; with a frustrating ending, unnecessary dialogue, questionable directing, and of course, the inability to provide substantial answers.
Chazz Palminteri, as the talkative hired gun, adapted the screenplay from his own play, with stagy set-ups and back-and-forth
dialogue
that quickly tires the eye and ear.
What little
dialogue
there is in the movie is as inane and nonsensical as the images.
There's barely any
dialogue
either.
I first saw the live musical at the Denver Center For The Performing Arts and it was absolutely mind-blowing, Stunning and had such fantastic continuity of plot and
dialogue
that I liked it much more than most musicals that I have seen on the stage.
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