Featuring
in sentence
514 examples of Featuring in a sentence
I watched DEATH MACHINES as part of BCI Eclipse' Drive-in Cult Classics
(featuring
Crown International Pictures releases) on DVD.
This is set on two beaches; one a nude beach
featuring
myriad (fully) unclothed women.
An absolutely baffling western
featuring
flash-forward sequences set in an insane asylum, South of Hell Mountain was one of the first films produced by the schlockmeisters at Cannon Film.
However, having said that, "Star Trek V: The Final Frontier" is easily the worst of the series
featuring
the original crew.
Major plot points are taken directly from Sergio Leone's masterpiece "Once Upon a Time in the West" (released two years earlier and also
featuring
Robards): A man finds a watering hole is found in the desert, being the only water for many miles in every direction, he plans to build a 'station' around the hole and to ensure there's a love interest, he falls in love with a prostitute.
This movie is divided in 5 parts, and only the fourth,
featuring
some funny ducks, is worth watching.
Even not being a fan of the "Star Trek" movies or universe of shows and books and such, I still find some enjoyment in some of the movies
featuring
the old cast and in the case of "First Contact" even the new cast a bit.
"Maximum Risk" is a step sideways for Van Damme and just more of the uninspired B-movie action stuff we've come to expect from films
featuring
the macho Belgian martial artist.
Officially the first martial arts movie in USSR cinematography
featuring
actual martial artists like Tadeush Kas'yanov and Russian Bruce Lee - Talgat Nigmatullin.
Recent examples include the poorly made but totally scary "Blair Witch Project" and of course - the most recent - that low-budget winner, SAW,
featuring
practically unknown leads (Gary Elwes is just someone you don't remember even if you have seen him before).
'wiedzmin' the movie is nothing but a collection of random scenes,
featuring
wiedzmin and other characters from sapkowski's writings, but not eben remotely resembling the plot and dramatic pace of the original.
Not too long ago I bought a cheap VHS tape entitled "Just Rambling Along" supposedly
featuring
Laurel and Hardy.
While credited as a Tom and Jerry cartoon, this is not the cat-and-mouse team but an earlier Mutt-and-Jeff rip-off
featuring
them going to Africa and disguising themselves in the stereotypical burnt cork makeup to try to blend in.
Unless you're interested in seeing 2 hours worth of scenic mountain footage
featuring
hysterical characters, lots of histrionics and cheap 70s gore (not much of it either), I would advise to avoid this movie.
The best scene of "The People Across The Lake" is the genuinely creepy, nightly opening-scene
featuring
a house, a murder & a lake.
The couple of scenes where they discover the bodies, are pretty convincing (in terms of creepiness), but they are in shrill contrast with the rest of the goings-on
(featuring
just every-day-life stuff of the family settling in).
The truth to the matters (the mystery as to who's doing the killing) is learned too soon, leaving only the family unknowing and the viewer yawning during the unexciting finale
(featuring
a discovery in a basement and running around the house), like if this made-for-TV thing suddenly remembered it was supposed to be a horror film.
Actually, the best performances are from a couple of fat guys who impress with a lively tap dance and a Four Tops takeoff, and the jazz band itself, especially in the number
featuring
the bass player.
This belabored and sloppy spy melodrama
featuring
two buffoonish (one idealistic, one drug addled) California kids dealing secrets to the KGB never seems to get enough steam up to sustain any tension and suspense before it dies a very slow death over two hours later.
I recently had the idea to make a short film
featuring
a man who is hit by a car and wakes up thinking that he himself is Chuck Norris.
If you want to see a good punk documentary watch "Another State of Mind
" featuring
Youth Brigade and Social Distortion.
"TNT Jackson" is a pretty lousy film, completely lacking a significant plot but
featuring
far too many laughable fighting scenes and horrible acting to compensate.
You can easily afford yourself to skip most of the films Fulci directed or produced during the late 80's and simply watch "Cat in the Brain" instead, because that one title gathers and repeats the best and absolute goriest footage of no less than SEVEN other Fulci-flicks, including the sickest murders sequences
featuring
in "When Alice Broke the Mirror".
For a film with the words Hell's Angels AND the number 69 AND
featuring
actual Hell's Angels, this movie is surprisingly tame.
The only reason I saw it was because it was on a DVD by Kino Films
featuring
non-Laurel and Hardy shorts
featuring
Ollie.
The screenplay is often acidic, cynical, and caustic and Killer Movie essentially pokes fun at realty television shows,
featuring
a cast of characters one might find on The Real World.
Knowing that their paper thin plot was barely enough to sustain a feature length movie, the filmmakers subject us to scene after scene of endless beach parties
featuring
tons of extras gyrating their half naked bodies in the scorching sun.
It is a spellbindingly tale told through flashbacks
featuring
amazing performances by all involved, somptuous visuals, characters we care about, and the most rapturous love story ever told.
Someone else? Contrary to most fan's frequent representation on the film's violent content - I consider it much more plot driven;
featuring
only one real moment of memorable bloodshed (involving chains and boards).
Dynamic fight choreography
featuring
authentic Kyokushinkai techniques.
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