Fashion
in sentence
1417 examples of Fashion in a sentence
Bookstore employee Virginia (Jenny Wright) reads a sick if oddly poetic horror story by an author named Malcolm Brand and in so doing resurrects the demented creep, who kills off real people in the same
fashion
as those in his book.
Buster Poindexter (I can't even think of the guy's name, because that's all he ever plays is that "character") plays a ranger in the woods (who wears a boy scout leader uniform) who helps pass the time in a creepy
fashion
along with 2 guys and a girl who both have very poor maintenance of their cars.
Since the English court generally took its
fashion
lead from the French, on top of which the English monarchy had only just been restored it hardly seems likely their fashions would have been so far ahead!
A severely deranged wacko psycho killer dressed in shiny skintight black leather and a motorcycle helmet brutally bags a bunch of beautiful young
fashion
models who all work for the same agency in this splendidly sleazy and notoriously nasty piece of typically twisted, yet stylish and polished low-grade Italian giallio murder mystery slasher thriller junk.
Their plans are big - they need a vast sum in order to move from their (ivory) tower to townhouse and hire - in typically unconventional
fashion
- a secretary to help them organise their income.
Because there is (for the most part) a sense of fun and adventure in the best of Errol Flynn's movies movie lovers tend not to see that he could perform well in dramatic
fashion.
while National socialist skinheads often are guilty of misrepresenting skinhead style and fashion, this is a silly exaggeration.
In typical Bollywood fashion, the two leads detest each other initially only to end up together.
Overacting, clichéd scenes, and 80's
fashion
fail this film.
In very unusual fashion, the film adaptation of the sequel of Japanese smash hit novel, "Ringu", began production and was released at the same time as "Ringu"'s own film adaptation.
Ever momentarily had an urge to kill someone when they stole a parking spot from you, badmouthed a member of your family, or committed an obvious
fashion
violation?
There's nothing unusual about Japanese dressing in hip hop
fashion
or trying to emulate African Americans.
The only notable thing this movie has for future generations of anthropologists is how it absolutely nails how white people in the 1980s were, just look at the fashion: pastels?
The story of their love is told in a very James Cameron's Titanic like fashion, as the old lady Catherine (now played by Polly Adams) returns to the land where she was born to retell the story of her lost love Kisna which we see in flashback as she is interviewed by some lucky reporters.
Tex Avery's 'Red Hot Riding Hood (1943)' opens in the usual fashion, but, after that, any resemblance to any known fairy-tale character, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
The second half of the film was a bit of a letdown as the writer tried to resolve the issues in a quick
fashion.
It's hard to blame the actors anyway, street-tough crime fighters being way out of
fashion.
The plot you see here was expanded quite a bit because on stage the whole thing takes place in the USA where the Randolph Scott character inherits a
fashion
designing business.
Witless romp featuring Gregory Peck as a sports-writer who has a whirlwind courtship with
fashion
guru Lauren Bacall, leading to a quick trip to the altar.
A cast of mostly Canadian actors, Dan Ackroyd (SNL), Thomas Gibson (Dahrma and Greg), and newcomer Pare are cast to perfection in a scathing parody of entertainment television, expose documentaries,
fashion
television, and talk shows.
Inoffensive piffle, brightly-made against '60s London backdrops (with curious but not entirely misplaced
fashion
lay-out interludes and musical montages).
The emphasis here is on fashion, and on the design house of Roberta - in reality, John Kent's (Randolph Scott) Aunt Minnie (Helen Westley), a dressmaker who found success in Paris.
We also get far more of Dom DeLuise mugging away as if semaphore were back in
fashion
than is strictly necessary, though he's not as OTT here as in Sherlock, for which we can at least be grateful.
The
fashion
it's made in is very similar to George A Romero's Dawn of the Dead, being lo-fi and confrontational, with a rich vein of social commentary running under the madness.
I'm partial to this movie because I grew up in the 80's and it brought me back to the music,
fashion
and fads!
The
fashion
is good and I really like all the characters.
Most of the jokes fall flat (apart from a few near the end, and a good joke on the "new
fashion
of rhyming" at the start).
The actors appear natural and believable (unlike some Latin "novelas"), developing their characters in a seamless and effortless
fashion.
I especially loved all of the bad 80s references, which added some reality to what a call a biopic of the 1980s (which also proves to be one the most turbulent decades
fashion
wise).
It's a just punishment for Dunaway's crimes against humanity, acting and
fashion
and it's a great relief for the audience.
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