Director
in sentence
6110 examples of Director in a sentence
This movie is somehow showing 6.2 stars, It seems inconceivable that the
director
has that many relations.
It seems to me that the
director
was walking into a losing battle.
I don't know if I'm even capable of tackling all the things wrong with it--like the fact that the casting
director
appears to have pulled names out of a hat, or the mind-blower of Richard Gere's character being allowed to walk away scot-free at the end (I'm sure the people saying, "It's just fiction, who cares" would have no problem if it was a former Al-Qaeda operative who just wants to return to his home country)--so I'll just devote my review to the utter hilarity, which is mainly the scene where Bruce Willis is testing out his gun.
The plot line is convoluted and the devices used to move the plot along (narrator), unexplained scene jumps and plenty of deus ex machina reinforce the idea that writer cum
director
is not a good idea.
ARMED AND DANGEROUS is still a dangerously disappointing dud brought to us by the
director
of the equally dumb actioner COMMANDO.
Great subject matter, director, and cast somehow adds up to a truly abysmal film, told in that flat, semi-documentary style that was so popular around the time this film was made.
What could have been an excellent hostage movie was totally ruined by what apparently looks like a bored
director
... there were so many directions that the movie could have taken ... a vampire slash-fest was not one of these!!!
The casting
director
and
director
should be held responsible for this debacle.
I am not quite sure I agree with the
director
of this version of The Scarlet Pimpernel.
Paul Le Mat, Diana Scarwid, Louise Fletcher, Wallace Shawn: fine actors who must have all been starving to death at that point in their lives and the
director
lured them to sign on with tempting bits of cat food.
That explanation is the
director'
s safety net.
Then there is the mass of academy award winning people involved here plus the academy award nominated
director.
The
director
took no chances into making Abbie Hoffman interesting in this movie.
The
director
seems like a good, solid man.
I would think that this was one of those films whose
director
hadn't read the book it was based on, were it not for the fact that they are just slightly similar.
At least there would be a good
director
behind the camera... Sorry Bruce, this just doesn't cut it for me.
At first the movie seemed to be doing great, they had the characters profiles set...the plot seemed to be going in the right direction... however, as the movie progressed it seemed the
director
focused on the wrong kind of things...or just a lot was edited from the movie.
AND the title... no where in the movie does the title fit the movie...I suppose the title works for the previews.... Actors did well with what they had.....if they had a better
director
and writer, maybe this would have worked out better.
First of all I dunno if I was supposed to use my imagination in this film or the
director
was trying to save money or low on budget!
The
director
somehow believed the two meshed well.
But the director, Mika Ninagawa, had to make sure that the
director
stood out even more than the main character, or even the story.
I hope we don't get to many movies anymore from this
director "
Pieter Jan Brugge" cause he obviously doesn't now the meaning of the words "suspence and thriller".
Beautiful, usually young, naked women filmed in the classy style we knew so well from
director
Hamiltons photography.
Three, and this is the most minor of the criticisms, why is the
director
so opposed to showing us the "Corndog Man" (a.k.a. the caller/son)?
So the film was one giant cow manure, to put it mildly, and the lowest point for its, otherwise not at all bad,
director.
As helmed by plodding
director
Charles Walters, everything here is made to seem intentionally innocuous, which doesn't lend the picture much staying power.
Drew Barrymore, fresh off her acclaimed role as "Poison Ivy", must have done this film simply as a favor to
director
Phedon Papamichael (he was the cinematographer on "Ivy"); playing a character named Daisy Drew (!), she's bumped off right away, which leaves us with no one to look at but Jeff Fahey and Sean Young (who hasn't had a single subtle moment on camera since "Blade Runner").
The aim of the
director
is obvious--to use an interweaving of speeches/poems as a way to argue against the Bush doctrine.
But the
director
fails miserably at this.
Also I seriously question the
director'
s choice of main character.
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