Golden
in sentence
608 examples of Golden in a sentence
It's the
golden
age of Hollywood at it's best.
Competently directed by Virgil Vogel, with a fanciful and intriguing script by Lazslo Gorog, handsome photography by Ellis Carter, admirably sincere acting from a solid cast (Agar is his usual reliably stalwart self while the lovely Cynthia Patrick makes for a charming heroine and Alan Napier has a grand time as an evil high priest), a steady, if less than stirring pace, nifty and impressive special effects (the matte paintings are beautiful), a properly eerie and claustrophobic atmosphere, funky monster make-up by Bud Westmore (the Mole People are truly gnarly-looking subhuman beasts), a rousing last reel revolt by the Mole People against their mean oppressors, and a surprisingly downbeat ending, this baby sizes up as a hugely enjoyable
golden
oldie fantasy horror picture.
Especially Marsha Cross, she is so ugly, and her head looks like a
golden
egg, or something all shiny and tight because she is so stupid and concerned about a single line that she is willing to look inhuman to fix it, and her acting is total crap!
A fairly good film, and something worth keeping as a token of your teenage
golden
years.
Billy Crystal promised to make a tribute to the
golden
age of sport.
I can't say this is a comfortable movie to watch, nor a family feature, not only because it has lots of bad words but it's also against other things that are apparently revered in this country, like the
golden
rule (he who has the gold makes the rules).
This movie is a loving look at the
golden
age of television comedy.
Jlo today is an actress with no career just observe the
golden
globes on Sunday giving out an award because Angelina Joli wasn't interested in doing it.
The shades are always closed, but warm, golden, late summer sunlight filters through, suggesting that it would be a wonderful place to either visit or, better still, to grow old in.
A demonic little Irishman(Warwick Davis) wreaks havoc in a small town in North Dakota when his
golden
coins are disturbed.
There is the ongoing secret courtship between married Howard and single attractive
golden
girl, Marina.
A product of the
golden
age of anime(mid to late 80s)Bubblegum Crisis has all the essential elements of great sci-fi and much more.
It was her first film for the cinema and then it was nominated for the
golden
globe.
The cinematography is beautiful but often not in sync with the theme (such as a character gliding through
golden
cornfields).
Among the greatest of them was Douglas Fairbanks, in his incarnation as the eternal swashbuckler, a romantic hero who could only exist in the
golden
days of the silent era.
While I have never been a big fan of John Garfield and did not consider him a top notch actor of the
golden
age of Hollywood, this part does seem made for him.
This was a
golden
age of television.
The climactic scene is as powerful and cathartic as The Shawshank Redemption's
golden
moment.
It is so fun looking back on that
golden
era, but it is sad that we will never capture that sense of glamour that was.
Peter Sova's dazzling cinematography, the flavorsome evocation of the groovy swinging 60's, the often amazing profane dialogue, John Dankworth's supremely jazzy'n'moody score, the stark, harsh tone, the fantastic
golden
oldies soundtrack, and a potent central message about the bitter spiritual coast of blind ambition all further add to the sterling quality of this bang-up corker of a crime thriller.
Cry a
golden
tear.
An undeserved BOMB of 1967, directed by A. Litvak co-starring the
golden
boys of five years earlier in LAWRENCE OF ARABIA (GREAT FILM), with a great supporting cast - Pleasance, J. Pettet, Tom Courtenay, Charles Gray..etc., it was the wrong year to talk about NAZI officers being private pervert/murderers in a world that was concerned about MODERN issues...like who was Robert Wagner dating that Summer?
If you're a referential person you'll be quoting lines from this movie into your
golden
years.
Maybe the
golden
years of sleazy & campy "Women in Prison" were long history by then already; maybe it didn't get properly promoted or announced in trailers (like "Reform School Girls", for example) or maybe it's just not good enough to compete with other & more successful films with a similar theme, but "Hell Hole" is a totally anonymous & overlooked 80's exploitation flick that only a handful of genre fanatics have heard of.
The whole dream of the
golden
eggs could be pulled out entirely and wouldn't change the movie any.
In Los Angeles, the lonely and paranoid Bob Maconel (Christian Slater) is a complete loser: at home, in spite of living in the same address for five years, his next door neighbor ignores his existence and he only talks to his alter-ego
golden
fish in his aquarium; in the office at ADD company, he is abused and humiliated by his colleagues and nobody has ever asked an opinion to him or invited him to a happy-hour.
The movie doesn't take you to that
golden
era (remember Mughal-e-Azam).
In this film you can see the Glory of those
golden
years!
The New Wave fizzled out after producing little of value, and the 1950s (no doubt its faults were real enough; Truffaut probably came close to seeing every single French film of that decade, so in one respect he'd be in a position to know) is looking more and more like a
golden
age, so maybe the phrase "cinema de qualite" is about due to be reclaimed.
Chronicling the true-life story of Frank Serpico, a police officer who exposed corruption in the NYPD, the film comes from that exquisite
golden
age of cinema, lasting from the late '60s through the late '70s, when paranoia infected the country and our most trusted and honored institutions were becoming suspect.
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