Dutch
in sentence
512 examples of Dutch in a sentence
Why would some body use so many
Dutch
angles and extreme closeup shots!!!!!!!
First of all I would like to point out that this film has absolutely nothing to see with the
Dutch
folklore story of the ghost ship that is also called THE FLYING DUTCHMAN.
As such, it is a unique story, and what's more, is the only film about the Holocaust that I have ever seen that shows that there were GOOD Germans (the helping family in "Anne Frank" for instance was Dutch) who did NOT support the Nazis, and, in fact, had the fortitude to stand up against their own country's immorality and brutality during the Nazi regime, at the risk of their very lives.
Where
Dutch
films tend to go just over the edge when it comes to this subject, 'De Grot' stays always within the boundaries of good taste.
One of the
Dutch
writer's more recent works is 'De Grot', a psychological thriller about two totally different men, Egon and Axel, who meet at a youth camp and, surprising enough, become friends for dear life.
This last work of
Dutch
director Paul Verhoeven in his home country before he moved to Hollywood to become a big star with movies like "Total Recall", "Basic Instinct" and "Starship Troopers" is about a psychopathic and disillusioned author (Jeroen Krabbe) going to the seaside for recovering.
He has to get together his old crew that he can trust to help him pull it off and get his bro out of
dutch.
The opening shots, although of an obese accountant doggy-styling his trophy wife, have the look and feel of a
Dutch
master's painting.
Also Hartley's use of
Dutch
angles throughout the film is jarring, yes, it's intention, but it feels forced and over-used, it goes beyond jarring to, what I'd like to call, annoying.
It will not only seem typical for people familiar with his American films because of the nudity and the graphic violent scenes, but it will also seem typical for people familiar with his
Dutch
films, because of the same things and his talent to tell a great story.
Just watch his
Dutch
films.
Very good for my (at the time school-)English, as
Dutch
TV provides subtitles for other languages, except for kiddies shows nowadays.
'De Grot' is a terrific
Dutch
thriller, based on the book written by Tim Krabbé.
Another of his books, 'Het Gouden Ei' was made into the great
Dutch
mystery thriller called 'Spoorloos' ('The Vanishing') in 1988.
Dutch
locations into a suspenseful film-noir setting, impressive work!
So very European, so very
Dutch!
The story is about a high-school student (Federico Pitzalis) who can't keep his eyes off the mysteriously beautiful young woman (played by
Dutch
phenom Maruschka Detmers) who lives next door to the school.
I just saw the movie on
Dutch
TV.
I don't understand why as there are some terrible
Dutch
films that are rated more highly.
The show had great music, scenery, bikes, chicks, Hummer H1, great story lines and
Dutch
Dixon.
We start out with some talking heads pontificating about what the word means to them, then there's a childish montage of people dropping the f-bomb, then a bunch of people spouting the (untrue) theory that the word is an acronym for "Fornication Under Consent of the King" (actually, it comes from an old
Dutch
word for "penis").
I went to see this film despite awful reviews from some
dutch
newspapers.
This is an odd little
Dutch
movie about a dress, which seems to be the bearer of bad luck for all who come into contact with it.
Margaretha Geertruida Zelle was born in 1876 in Leeuwarden, Holland, by
Dutch
parents.
She did, however, have a connection to Java (then part of the
Dutch
empire), having lived there 1897-1902.
There are at least three reasons to love this movie: The performance of the director himself as the psychopathic ticket collector; the short segment showing musical indifferencies between
dutch
construction workers and Indian immigrants, and the timeless sequence that just hints at a very weird sexual orientation of a designer.
"The Vanishing", or "Spoorloos" (its original
Dutch
title) tells the story of Rex Hofman (Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu), who is on a carefree road trip with his girlfriend, Saskia (Johanna ter Steege).
The central characters, a
Dutch
couple Rex and his girlfriend Saskia, are average looking and behave in unspectacular fashion, laughing, arguing as most couples do.
This ravishing
Dutch
actress has the face of an angel, the voice of a siren and a booty that would even make the most popular Hollywood actress jealous.
The best word to describe this movie is 'gezellig', a
dutch
word which unfortunately is notoriously renowned for it's inability to be translated into another language.
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