Garden
in sentence
840 examples of Garden in a sentence
Joe, well cast, is The Gardener, a peculiar, often shirtless, infantile fellow who comes to work in Katherine Houghton's garden, a
garden
so large Joe is able to hang out in it without being seen.
This movie is notable for perpetuating a collection of tired marijuana myths often found in any
garden
variety anti-drug pamphlet.
I love this movie & often wish that my family could live where they did.I first found out about it when I was little from my mother- it's a good mother/daughter movie.I don't own it yet but will very soon so my daughter can watch it.I hope that she loves it just like I did (still do) The are some sad parts in the movie where it shows how Collins mother died & the
garden
was never open again.It took a little girl with a kind heart to win over her uncle-in-law in order for him to let her have the key.To me this movie says that anything is possible with love & care & that children are brilliant,not only do they learn from us but we can learn from them as well.I think that the parents that are too busy & have way too many things going on in their daily schedule need to take time out to watch this movie & do something with their children.There is a plot of land next to us here where we live that I want to make a
garden
out of & I want my kids to help with it (: thanks mom & to all mothers everywhere (patting myself on the back- I'm a mom too (:
She convinces her father to travel abroad using his
garden
gnome; she helps her neighbor that is an outcast and lonely painter and the super that misses her unfaithful husband; she also helps her hypochondriac colleague that works in the tobacco shop and the man that stalks the other waitress acting like cupid; she plays pranks to an employer that mistreats his employee with abusive relationship.
Ah, the many memories I have with The Secret Garden, I have to admit it, when I was a kid, I had this group of girlfriends and we always thought it would be so cool if we discovered a
garden
just like the children in this movie did.
Rather than have the
garden
act as a magical entity in itself, it is more of an escape from the creepy dreariness of Misselthwaite Manor, a gigantic monstrosity of a mansion that does justice to the enormity of the one portrayed in the novel but is such a brooding and unpleasant place that the escape of it overshadows the magical curiosity that should be entailed by the
garden.
The only entertainment value to be found as Varney mugs endlessly and destroys everything around him is in the hopelessly slack direction, which leads to such lapses in logic as a cannon rolling for miles along a completely straight road, a sequence that is topped only when the cannon bursts into a
garden
but leaves the fence behind it completely intact.
Only this time it's not from a
garden
but the warm glow of a Chinese Food restaurant.
And their remains become mulch for the widow's growing
garden
as each is buried under a quickly flourishing sapling.
While spending his days in the cell waiting for the guillotine and the executioner, Neel is invited by the captain's wife Mrs. Pauline (Juliette Binoche) to help her in her
garden
and becomes her protégé.
Joan Crawford chopping down the orange tree in her
garden
in "Mommie Dearest" was a lot scarier than the maniac chopping up dumb slasher-victim characters in "Stage Fright".
The other was Alistair Sim, who I consider the best Scrooge ever, with George C. Scott close behind- he had some very funny moments, the most notable one being at the
garden
party and the doll stall.
He is distracted by a strange noise, he investigates & finds the source is a little plant in a shop, well it's meant to be a shop but it more closely resembles a shed in someones front
garden.
This begins with Peter Jackson talking about how he was asked by McKenzie's widow if he'd be interested in a bunch of old films in a trunk in her
garden
shed.
Says our dignified narrator and guide, "Britain...Britain...Britain...land of tradition...fish and fries...the changing of the garden...trooping the colours.
Who cares if the film is all lies with enough clichés to fill Madison square
garden.
What he tries to do is burgle them, but the
garden
gnomes have over ideas.
Forget Shearer's uneven acting, which as in all her films veers from the truly affecting to the annoyingly melodramatic (e.g., her stagey, even hokey body language in the night meeting with Tyrone Power in the
garden
just after she becomes queen, when he makes her understand they must not see each other again).
Actors and scenery captures the story for us, of a little boy, motherless because of an accident and the
garden
that claimed her life.
The boys father keeps the
garden
hidden from all.
She disposes of the bodies under pine trees growing in her
garden.
Perhaps that is the key, referring to the root of the poisonous plant found in the chic ultra-fab Malibu seaside manse's
garden
which, in the long run (spoilers begin here) acts as a deus ex machina at the end the movie.
Absurd adaptation of a dinner-theater perennial by Alec Coppel has television-writer Glenn Ford attempting to cover up a murder by burying the corpse underneath wife Debbie Reynolds
' garden
gazebo.
The images of the
garden
itself are absolutely stunning, it is almost worth watching the film just to see the beautiful landscape and architecture which is featured in it.
Exquisitely filmed, and often featuring gorgeous seaside or
garden
backdrops, the picture is actually very artful and poetic, as reflected in some of its chapter titles (such as "Crying Bamboo Dolls of the Netherworlds" and "Umbrella of Blood, Heart of Strewn Flowers").
I enjoy because I think that most of us who started watching televised science fiction (When there were really only three channels, when the creatures were usually enlarged
garden
denizens, large bug-like sculptures, or just some guy wearing something that looked like one of your auntie's failed quilting projects, and when any sci-fi tended to be broadcast long after our parents had been safely tucked into bed and Johnny Carson had signed off.) learned early on that a little artistic honesty and a sense of humor are far more important than overly dramatic posturing to any show's success as entertainment.
One scene in the movie was Lauren reflecting on her situation, looking out an upstairs window onto the
garden
-- I can still picture it after all these years.
As for the "hanging
garden"
of the title: it's a cheat, with limbs kicking and flowers dying in stop-motion.
But it's not an ordinary key, is the key from the secret garden, a
garden
who once was the place where her aunt always loved to stay and that now is locked since she died.
Mary ask Dickons to help her to restore the garden,but they both make it a secret.
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