Filmed
in sentence
1416 examples of Filmed in a sentence
I'm going to be generous here and give it a 3 only because I live in Huntsville and it was great to see how well the city was
filmed.
Filmed
in France, "The Land That Loves Lewis (Jerry)" in 1950 and released the following year after a five-year layoff, the boys are in truly terrible shape physically.
Its a sin how these things are made, but then again we wouldn't get to see the best "Dummy scene" ever
filmed.
Still, the fantasy aspect of this particular story, previously
filmed
in 1924 from the book by Laura E. Richard, is enough to captivate those in the proper saccharine spirit.
As far as the actual photography... every time the sun shines in a shot, you'd have all these blown out whites, confirming that you're watching some ultra-low budget mini-DV project that some Midwesterner
filmed
at his Uncles farm.
I don't know if it was the way that it was
filmed
or the story behind the characters, but it felt bland, overused, and completely unoriginal.
I would like to know the real name of the Lodge where scenes from the movie were
filmed.
Easy on its easy to tell this is a budget on a shoestring affair;
filmed
independently in Bulgaria.
That's a fitting way to phrase it because it seems like
filmed
material from several projects were thrown together somehow, barely even attempting to make it all form one consistent work.
I believe that the house may be haunted, but not on the night this movie was
filmed!
It's
filmed
a lot inside a building rather than a friend's basement.
Filmed
over a hundred years ago, I can only hope that we've evolved into something a little more humane and compassionate.
In some scenes you can see that it was
filmed
in some photo when !!!!!(spoilers ahead)!!!!!people running around does not disturb people sitting near computers.
I couldn't help but think that if more scenes were
filmed
with any of the b movie veterans above the film would be a whole lot better but as it is there are just a few tantalising glimpses of good entertainment without the film ever actually attaining much entertainment value.
For starters, the film looks like it was
filmed
in just empty rooms with a couple of props thrown in to make it look good.
And the title says it all: a cheesy sounding title that is a cheesy sounding joke of a film known as "Alien from L.A." Why not just call it "Alien from South Africa," as this is the place where this movie was
filmed?
One night, Showtime unveiled a little Italian-made gem called "Redneck
" (filmed
in 1972, given a limited European release in 1973).
According to Veronica herself, the film was shelved for three years because no master shots were
filmed.
this movie looks like a 60's old and purely made film with cast of grown neanderthals, not to mention (or actually do), not paying attention to details like changing rounds, low budget fireworks and all sorts of poorly
filmed
characteristic.
It's as if they took every unused script for stupid westerns and just mixed them together and
filmed
it.
It was 25 years old,
filmed
w/no props except swords, no furniture except chairs.
Not only have I read the book and watched the movie, but I was stationed on the USS John F Kennedy when they
filmed
this.
We saw it as a poorly
filmed
(shaky hand-held camera and all), (generally) badly acted, unscripted mess that seemed more like a high school film project with the kids experimenting in black & white film making.
This is NOT mandatory viewing, especially for youngsters learning about Anne Frank for the first time- stick to the original film version, and or even better, the TV production of ANNE FRANK: THE TRUE STORY starring Ben Kingsley, which is the CLOSEST thing to capturing the heartbreak and reality of Anne's situation ever
filmed!
It was being touted I believe as the first feature length movie
filmed
in the new 3D process.
It's well
filmed
but predictable and it's all been done before, only better.
Then Charlie Sheen decided to drag the surviving enemy down to the depths of the ocean (the way it was filmed, with the many camera cuts, it looked like they went down about 80 feet.
When I read 'In The Electric Mist With The Confederate Dead' was being
filmed
and Tommy Lee Jones was playing the lead, I was thrilled.
Overall, I wish that they had
filmed
more of the 'Electric Mist and the Confederate Dead' and left out large portions of Robicheaux's methods of interrogation, explaining Elrod's gifts and his bond to Dave, as well as Dave's to the General.
Dating from 1949, Scene of the Crime often plays more like a Coen Bros. movie set in the 1940's and
filmed
in black and white, except that the writer's ear for pastiche here isn't quite so well-tuned -- maybe this can be seen instead as the forerunner to Oscar-baiting schlock like Road to Perdition.
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