Estate
in sentence
855 examples of Estate in a sentence
Drake plays a tape recording of they're late Father's wishes after his death, the
estate
worth 136 million dollars is to be split equally between his four children, if any should die then the money would be split equally between the rest & if all were to die the freaky servants Elga (Ivy Bethune), Igor (Buck Kartalian) & the more mundanely named Frank (John Russell) would pocket the lot.
This film is an obvious attempt by Renoir to recapture the success he had with THE RULES OF THE GAME, as the movie is very similar once the action switches to the country
estate
(just as in the other film).
Harrison Ford's character is trying to sell real
estate
on the side and is sleeping with the Internal Affairs investigator's ex-wife who happens to run a psychic radio show which Ford's character calls from time to time.
Airport '77 starts as a brand new luxury 747 plane is loaded up with valuable paintings & such belonging to rich businessman Philip Stevens (James Stewart) who is flying them & a bunch of VIP's to his
estate
in preparation of it being opened to the public as a museum, also on board is Stevens daughter Julie (Kathleen Quinlan) & her son.
Trifling romantic drama directed by Clint Eastwood about the loving relationship which grows between a comely hippie (Kay Lenz) and a Los Angeles real
estate
agent in his golden years (William Holden, surprisingly affable within this highly-concocted arrangement).
The pilot, Jim Norton (John Bromfield), goes to work for Valerie Craig (Kathleen Hughes) who soon coerces him into helping her wrest control of the
estate
from her troubled sister, Lorna (Sara Shane) and the family lawyer (Jess Barker).
A young solicitor in sent to a remote area to wrap up the
estate
of a recently deceased client.
The real
estate
agent, a Miss Logan(AVA GARDNER), seems to be very interested in having Alison take the apartment- an interest that cannot be solely explained by the 6% commission she would earn.
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?
A young solicitor from London, Arthur Kidd is sent to a small coastal town of Crythin Gifford to oversee the
estate
of a recently passed away widow Mrs Drablow.
"The Woman in Black" is easily one of the creepiest British ghost stories ever made.A young solicitor,after arriving in a small town to handle a dead client's estate,is haunted by a mysterious woman dressed all in black.The film is loaded with extremely eerie atmosphere and the frights are calculated for and deliver the maximum effect possible.The action keeps the viewer deeply involved and the finale is quite disturbing.The acting is excellent and the tension is almost unbearable at times.So if you want to see a truly creepy horror film give this one a look.I dare anyone to watch "The Woman in Black" alone at night with the lights off.Highly recommended.10
The cinematography was excellent as it really captured the scariness and isolation of the huge housing
estate.
The
estate
looked like an old prison.
Threatened with the danger of losing the opulent family home, Big Sister makes a grand sacrifice and secretly marries a real
estate
developer so she can inherit her... aunt's fortune.
A few years later, she learns that he is after the family
estate
and wants to tear it down so she leaves him and tries to stop him.
An anti-Fascist, a worker in the underground movement, many times injured, and wanted by the Nazis, Kurt Muller (Lukas) is in need of a long vacation on the
estate
of his wealthy mother-in-law.
In New York, Andy Hanson (Philip Seymour Hoffman) is an addicted executive of a real
estate
office that has embezzled a large amount for his addiction and expensive way of life with his wife Gina (Marisa Tomei).
The only other person she sees is the
estate
caretaker, a lascivious character played by Maxwell Reed, whose caught the wayward eye of the middle-aged aunt.
As it is, a frame-up for a murder sends Trevor Howard (a fired government secret service agent who took a job at the
estate
cataloging butterflies) and Simmons across the countryside escaping police, catching headlines of "Police Net Closing In" over her front page photo, hopping on buses, and winding up in Liverpool, where they meet some wonderfully cast characters, and finally face down the greedy and murderous aunt and uncle.
Looking like a combined clone of Morticia Adams and Anna Nicole Smith, she inherits a distant relative's
estate
only to discover that she is really the heiress of the occult.
When he sees an advertisement of a huge house for sale in the country of Connecticut for an affordable price, he drives with his wife and the real
estate
agent and decides to buy the old house without any technical advice.
Almost immediately she is drugged and shipped off to the family's
estate
in Cornwall.
Last night I finished re-watching "Jane Eyre" (1983), the BBC mini-series adapted from Charlotte Bronte's Gothic romance novel which is deservingly a classic of English literature with Timothy Dalton (my favorite James Bond) as Mr. Edward Rochester and Zelah Clarke, as Jane Eyre, a poor orphaned 18-year-old girl, a governess at Mr. Rochester's estate, Thornfield.
A naive young lawyer ("solicitor" in Britspeak) is sent to a small village near the seaside to settle an elderly, deceased woman's
estate.
Well, guess what, there's nothing "healthy" about the village of Crythin Gifford, the creepy site of the elderly woman's hulking, brooding Victorian estate, which is located on the fringes of a fog-swathed salt marsh.
It tells the story of Patrick Galloway an expert of the occult and a formidable fighter who is summoned by a friend to his
estate
in Ireland to investigate some weird phainomena.
Mostly the game revolves around the Covenant
estate
and the mansion but there are many other locations waiting to be discovered as you progress.
The story revolves around events in a seaside community in the early 20th century where a young solicitor is sent by his firm to conclude the affairs of a recently deceased widow, who died on her isolated marshland
estate.
After a few very dated late-1970s disco and office scenes, Dorothy's character is kidnapped and sent to a strict "school of discipline" at a country
estate.
Porky and Sylvester arrive an an run down house (the last that the real
estate
agent had,) right away the cat gets scared by an bat.
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