Football
in sentence
685 examples of Football in a sentence
Yes, we all know Southerners like
football
and beauty pageants.
The one kid who's mom is obsessed with him being a
football
player.
The
football
team within itself had a lot of stereotypes, including a Mexican, a cocky jock, a fat guy, the scrawny nerd, and the mentally handicapped aid.
It was full of plot holes, inaccuracies (doesn't the time-clock stop for injured players or loss of helmets in Texas
football
games?) and not so much redemption (So Your Dad Beats the Crap out of You?
where did all the laughs go.did the forget to put them in,on the version i watched.as a
football
movie,it is mildly entertaining,i guess.maybe'm
Young Hotshot learns from Father Figure all the ins-and-outs of a lucrative yet degrading career (this time, it's
football
handicapping).
When this movie was made in 1980, I was a teenager in the
football
stands playing as part of the audience.
The
football
scenes are nothing special and seem to mainly act as filler for the movie.
And John Lithgow as an ex
football
player who has had a sex-change operation is fantastic... he never once camped it up or made the character anything but commendable - and as such his performance had an incredibly integrity.
Necessary Roughness (1991) was a bad comedy/ drama that tried to hard on every level to be a serious film about college
football.
He got the spot because he was dating this cheerleader from a semi-pro
football
team called The Oregon Thunderbolts.
This is probably the way others view things Americans take for granted, such as American football, fried Snicker bars and Paris Hilton!
Well, the episode I just watched had the older "Gastineau Girl" whining about why people keep mentioning her husband (Mr Gastineau, a famous American
Football
player apparently).
This has to be the worst
football
movie ever made.
There is no plot, and half the movie is fast flashing shots from
football
games.
When he "respectfully refuses" to betray the lives of his fellow soldiers they bash his head in a with a baseball bat, cheering, and swearing as if they were at a
football
game.
Irvine Welsh's follow up to Trainspotting hits the screen as three short stories set in Edinburgh, all with a few of Welsh's trade marks, drug culture, depression, the working class and Hibernian
football
club.
They have Al Pacino say a lot of words like - "Television killed football."
If Stone is trying to show us that
football
will be our downfall or something, why does he insist on romanticizing the sport with his stilted camera movements and Kid Rock songs?
The premise is hysterical (men are banned for being too dangerous and imprisoned in -- haw! --
football
stadiums), the pseudo-dyke culture is laughably bizarre (there's an underground sex trade with women who dress up like men to service "deviants") and the "last man" of the title is a pitiful reincarnation of Rocky from Rocky Horror Picture Show.
In fact, this film proves that the only reason she got much of any attention were her boobs and because she was involved with the incredibly self-destructive
football
player, Mark Gastineau.
Robert Carlyle fully realises his potential as an actor of supreme mediocrity with only one expression to his repertoire (that of a chronically constipated
football
hooligan nursing a crippling inferiority complex), which he manages at times to alter slightly by flaring his nostrils and baring a row of skewed yellow teeth (this to indicate anger, tenderness, grief, surprise, horror, hilarity, compassion, etc.)
Sure half of the movie is a blind post-op
football
player shooting the breeze with his stacked nurse, but at any moment we might be cutting away to the cackling disembodied head of the satanist mastermind, or Nurse Sherri running a farmer through with a pitchfork, or a wee bit of abstract student-film quick cutting to go with the pulsing-blob effects in the possession scene, or the most gratuitously half-hearted topless bit ever, or god knows what else (I forget, to be honest).
The government wants to asses the effects of space travel on certain organisms but the capsule crashes and a mutant something-or-other (looks like a guy in an ape suit with the top of a
football
helmet over his face) wreaks havoc around the accident scene, which includes a favorite place for the window-fogging, partying set.
That's ignoring the fact that it depicts the extreme ignorance of American sports fans, with many of the cast professing that a
football
is shaped like a lemon.
The story follows a group of no hopers that get a new teacher that they like (who, coincidently, teaches the class in a short skirt) and gets them interested in
football.
All of the
football
players and cheerleaders are especially angry at her for writing an article on steroid abuse for the school paper.
Instead, we get a paper thin, overdone plot about a group of cheerleaders who get stranded in an abandoned cabin on the way to a
football
game, only to be offed one by one.
A man-size frog incites chaos; causing a car crash, raping the chemical company boss's daughter, raping a girl under the bleachers at a
football
game, stiff-arm tackling a runner in the
football
game, raping a nun...all before being shot twice in the chest after an antidote was found all ready.
A comedy that spoofs the inspirational sports movies, The Comebacks tells the story of an out-of-luck coach, Lambeau Fields, who takes a rag-tag bunch of college misfits and drives them towards the
football
championships.
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