Director
in sentence
6110 examples of Director in a sentence
Pistol-packing Pam Grier takes names and kicks butt as the heroine in "Asylum of Satan
" director
William Girdler's entertaining blaxploitation actioneer "Sheba Baby," co-starring D'Urville Martin and Austin Stoker.
Unfortunately, "Sheba Baby" isn't nearly as good as the blaxploitation movies that Grier made under the supervision of
director
Jack Hill.
But, it goes far beyond that as the
director
takes control of the plot and moves it to the supernatural thriller it is.
No one would ever question that
director
Leos Carax is a genius, but what we wonder about is: is he an insane genius?
This is undoubtedly the most harrowing black-and-white war film that I've watched; as a matter of fact, the only Western
director
during this time to remotely approach its level of intensity and sheer visceral power in his work was Samuel Fuller.
"The Cell" is an exotic masterpiece, a dizzying trip into not only the vast mind of a serial killer, but also into one of a very talented
director.
Highly manipulative picture doesn't give us a very realistic familial unit (with young Justin Henry certainly not resembling the product of a marriage between Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep!), but the dynamics are intriguing and involving, and
director
Robert Benton keeps the pace popping with lots of cleverness, marvelous classical music, canny editing and surefire bits of humor.
Think of what its director, William Wyler, faced; in the aftermath of a military victory over statist powers who had committed abominable crimes and engulfed the world if battles, he was making a film that argued that the US's leaders were themselves profoundly anti-individual--that they had "wasted the best years of the lives of those drafted or misled into fighting the war--which since it ignored the rights of individuals had been for nothing except argument over the degree of slavery men were to exist under."
And if you've seen cult
director
Richard Kelly's previous films, "Donnie Darko" and "Southland Tales," you know that's gotta mean something.
The last film of John Huston, the great American
director
of the Irish descent is an adaptation of the last short story in the early collection "Dubliners", of the greatest writer ever came from Ireland.
The dying
director
made it based on the script adapted by his son Tony Huston from one of the most poignant, beautiful and profound short story ever written in this language and considered by many THE BEST English language short story.
This is a crowning achievement for a
director
who in my view can already be proclaimed as the Turkish equivalent to directors like Tarkovsky, Bresson, and Ozu.
The main character is a talented movie
director
who decides to make a silly PG-13 movie to get himself out of hock with the IRS.
1992's "Batman Returns" was Tim Burton's second round as
director
and yet again he scored a hit by making this film again dark and gloomy like his 1989 one.
Bergman is a sublime comedy
director
and writer.
Spanish novel
director
Jesus Ponce creates one of the most perfect gallery from the latest year of Spanish cinema.
Every year there's one can't-miss much-anticipated red-hot big-budget title with the right combination of star,
director
and subject matter that fails miserably at the box-office.
In 1957 it was Billy Wilder's The Spirit of St Louis, a film that had everything - top director, huge star, best-selling true story about an American hero - except enough of an audience to cover its costs.
Truly unique and stunning film of Jules Verne's "For The Flag" by the Czech master
director
Karel Zeman.Although the story is enacted in a rather understated late Victorian style, the visuals are a knockout.
A true cinematic work of art from a visionary
director.
Directed by a veteran Hollywood
director
Henry King who began his career still in 1915, Love is a Many Splendored Thing was one of his last great films.
I knew the premise of this film, and obviously I can't miss a good sounding film, especially from "Master of Suspense
" director
Sir Alfred Hitchcock.
Also starring Patricia Hitchcock (the
director'
s daughter) as Barbara Morton, Marion Lorne as Mrs. Anthony, Jonathan Hale as Mr. Anthony, Howard St. John as Police Capt.
Watching "Cold Mountain" gave me the impression that its director, Anthony Minghella, was deliberately trying to outdo himself and the own film of his' that he was trying to beat was the virtually impeccable "The English Patient" from 1996.
The autumnal mood conjured up could only been achieved by a
director
who has seen many summers of experience.
Perhaps the best movie ever made by
director
Kevin Tenney (well, his Witchboard is not on the top of my all-time horror list), this one is a strange, fascinating mixture between Pin and Child's Play, both better than this one, but not so better.
Continuing with the exclusive film programme about complicated relationships in some European courts, last night in the Schloss theatre was shown "Anna Boleyn", a film directed by the great Teutonic film
director
Herr Ernst Lubitsch.
Duncan Rogers is obviously a
director
with the ability to put all the pieces together, I'm looking forward to his next finished project.
Billy Hughes is a mute young lady working for make-up on a cheap horror picture being filmed in Moscow by an American
director.
Its a fine effort by
director
Ryan Little to bring us a story about a rebellious teen played by Sean Farris (Never Back Down), as Rick Penning that finds himself in an odd place, both on and off the field.
Back
Next
Related words
Movie
About
Would
Which
There
Great
Story
Could
Writer
Films
Actors
First
Should
Think
Really
Their
After
Other
Movies
People