Featured
in sentence
426 examples of Featured in a sentence
Current pretty-boy Hardy Kruger Jr --possibly more handsome than his dad-- is
featured
as Weller's arrogant boss in a horrifying sequence at a chemical production plant which gets the story moving.
The Coca-Cola company wins the Product Placement award for 2000 as the soft drink is
featured
throughout the production, shot lovingly on location in a wintery picture-postcard Hungary.
Robert Acosta, Paul Rieckhoff, Sean Huze, and Herold Noel, all veterans of the war in Iraq and
featured
in the film, were present.
John Boorman's best (closely followed by Zardoz and Excalibur) was - and still is - a very influential film and it contains several memorable scenes that already
featured
in numberless other movies.
Also this tale was in the 1972 movie and
featured
Joan Collins, this is without a doubt one of my favorites and probably one of the classic crypt episodes of all-time!
Iwas
featured
as a pregnant teenager in the second half of the movie.
I originally saw this movie as a boy at the old Rialto Theatre as part of a Saturday afternoon matinée triple bill which also
featured
Vincent Price's "Last Man on Earth" and Mario Bava's "Nightmare Castle."
It was brilliantly directed by John Dahl and
featured
a marvellous cast including Nicolas Cage, Dennis Hopper, Lara Flynn Boyle and especially J. T. Walsh (in a memorable performance) making this a riveting and captivating thriller not to be missed.
However, as the credits began to roll I could only think about how well "The Big Bad Swim" compared to the others
featured
during the festival.
The office itself is almost an exact replica of the one
featured
in Bogey's "Maltese Falcon."
This 1998 film was based on a script by the late Edward D. Wood, a script that
featured
NO dialogue in the tradition of films such as THE THIEF.
This movie was
featured
on a very early episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000, but when I see this film, I don't think about that wonderful TV series.
"Guys and Dolls," the seemingly indestructible stage musical, was captured on film in 1955 by Joseph L. Mankiewicz ("All About Eve") in a colorful, enjoyable movie that
featured
an all-star cast including Vivian Blaine (from the original Broadway show), Jean Simmons (whose character bears an odd resemblance to Audrey Hepburn in "Roman Holiday") and two of the all-time great leading men, Frank Sinatra and Marlon Brando, both of whom had recently won Oscars for Best Supporting Actor ("From Here To Eternity") and Best Actor ("On the Waterfront") and were on the top of their game.
She later played opposite him in On the Town, but Pamela Britton was
featured
in this film.
This apparently home-made video rambled on with a barely discernable plot and
featured
a family of losers who have something to do with a fruit market and an opera singer who looks like a Saturday Night Live parody of an aged Maria Callas.
Some curious cameos are also
featured
here from a number of character actors that are passable considering all, though to be honest I'm still scratching my head as to why any of them would have actually made appearances in this flick in the first place; the actors I'm in reference to are: Maury Chakin, Christopher Walkin (!?), the late Michael Jeter, the late William Hickey who passed away shortly after this film wrapped and who's memory it is dedicated to in the end credits, and Vicki Lewis.
"Nemesis 3
" featured
so much recycled footage from "Part 2" that the story didn't seem to progress at all, and the result was an essentially pointless and useless movie.
Even Disney didn't want to make his latest film, Lady in the Water, fearing that it was poorly written,
featured
too large a role for the writer/director, and contained an embarrassingly self-indulgent attack at his detractors, the crrritics.
Veterans Borgnine and Lupino (who was also part of the cast of the awful "the food of the gods") tried to regain prestige in horror movies as Bette Davis or Joan Bennett did.But "the devil's rain" was not a good choice,by a long shot.The story is nonexistent,I dare anybody to find something looking like a plot in this flick.Pre-"Star trek" William Shattner is tortured all film long.Pre-"Saturday night fever" Travolta is featured,but where?
2. The plot in this cartoon is somewhat cliché, but I found it very entertaining all the same and is a plot change from the Looney Tunes cartoons I usually watch (where no respected girlfriend is featured).
FRANKENSTEIN when it first saw theatrical release: the co-stars of this one had turned up on the cover of FAMOUS MONSTERS OF FILMLAND (which had
featured
an article on the movie without advising those of us who cared about such things that it might be something less than entertaining- on any level).
Flynn was clearly comfortable with light comedy; it
featured
some great "bad guy" work by Robert Douglas; and, despite production problems caused BY Flynn's excesses, the editing in of sequences from Robin Hood and Elizabeth and Essex worked very well.
Bela Lugosi is
featured
as the butler, Peters, and he plays the role perfectly straight (in a sense perfectly cast, because I can't picture Lugosi doing comedy) and that straight performance adds both to the comedy and the mystery (Peters comes across as mysterious throughout.)
She played the main feminine role in Abbott and Costello Meet the Invisible Man (1951) and was then third-billed (Mark Stevens and Rhonda Fleming were the stars
featured
on all the posters) in Little Egypt (1951).
As I recall, in G. Lucas' film "THX-1138" there was a television channel that
featured
nothing but a robot beating a naked person with his billy club.
The only good thing about this movie is that it
featured
attractive actors and actresses.
And not unlike other disaster movies there is vast and varied talent
featured
in the cast: Sharon Lawrence, Jennifer Garner, Fred Weller, Lisa Nicole Carson, Rachel Ticotin and Cicely Tyson.
Many expat Hungarians were in the audience at the viewing I attended, probably thinking that they were going to see something on the order of "the history of taxidermy," or a movie that
featured
rooms in a museum full of trophy fowl.
The cover
featured
a man in a Mohawk popping out of a TV screen and the movie description promised things like "video demons control your every move" and a "gruesome journey into a world of subliminal psychic nightmares".
The story structure was essentially unprecedented -- with the exception of that same year's Freaks, which was unprecedented in practically every way possible -- in that it
featured
multiple characters with independent relationships and intertwining narratives (in other words, it laid the groundwork for every Robert Altman film ever made -- Gosford Park in particular).
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