Guilty
in sentence
817 examples of Guilty in a sentence
And this dock worker felt
guilty
for being more productive.
Now, most of the time, we expect the opposite, that people feel
guilty
for being unproductive, you know, a little too much time on Facebook or Twitter at work.
But this worker felt
guilty
for being more productive, and asked why, he said, "I know I'm doing wrong.
I wasn't expecting "Citizen Kane" but I was hoping for some extreme
guilty
pleasure!
The conspirators do a pretty thorough job of making him look
guilty.
Seriously he could feel
guilty
over killing a fly then feeling
guilty
over feeling
guilty
for killing the fly and so forth.
Crime is kept under control by Core Trackers, android assassins dispatched by the United States Computerized Judicial System to execute the
guilty.
What I came away with after watching this movie was a
guilty
conscience.
CyberTracker is set in Los Angeles sometime in the near future where bodyguard Eric Phillips (co-producer Don 'The Dragon' Wilson) saves senator Robert Dilly (John Aprea) from an assassination attempt by a group known as the UHR, the Union of Human Rights, who are angry at Dilly for spearheading the Computerised Judicial System in which robots called CyberTrackers are sent out to determine & dispense justice on the
guilty.
As some of the characters are visited by dead people and some just seem to be haunted by their
guilty
consciences it's not quite clear exactly what the connection is, but the visions do all seem to look like sixth form art films.
We, the jury, find this film
guilty
for its indecent exposure to many of us sitting around believing it's a total waste of our time!
The screenplay is shoddily pasted together and dumbed down to boot, the production values are lackluster, and the cast (apart from Jemma Redgrave and Blake Ritson) are largely
guilty
of bad acting.
Over acted, heavy handed, full of speeches, preachy, on the nose, and over stylized in a way only MTV could be
guilty
of, Stop-Loss is agit-prop garbage.
The main issue here is that Attenborough's character brings everything upon himself and, quite frankly, is
guilty
of almost every accusation brought against him, so it's baffling why the film (and all the characters) have so much sympathy for him.
The kid was meant to have committed a crime when he didn't and If he did, writing a letter to no one is not an answer and you shouldn't feel not
guilty
just because you wrote that letter, he should have been punished.
A perfect crime is executed and the investigating police officer, ignoring all the clues, immediately knows who
guilty
is.
The audience has to wait around the whole movie for the
guilty
to be caught.
I caught this on HBO under its category of
"Guilty
Pleasures", and I would agree that I felt
guilty
(and pleasured) watching it.
Oh yes, I admit I have made myself
guilty
of the crime of seeing this piece of trash.
The priest denies he's
guilty
but at the same time he is not able to discuss the matter due to confidentiality.
The suspense starts out well, with the hit-and-run resulting in death and the question of whether the
guilty
character will confess, or be found out, or (doable now, though a no-no in the old days of movie-making) get away with it.
Basically, this is a whodunnit, heavy on the red herrings: everybody appears guilty, rather than just the two one suspects from the beginning.
Considering that the latter two movies have him co-starring with Dolph Lundgren and James Belushi it is indeed something to say that three
guilty
pleasure action flicks are in the running for his better work.
All three of these travesties the makers of this film are
guilty
of.
However, I've had my share of
guilty
pleasures, particularly when I was still in high school myself.
This film features two of my favorite
guilty
pleasures.
Torture is a terrible thing, whether one is
guilty
or not; in the 18th Century, FrederickII, King of Prussia, abolished it for convicted murderers - though I must say, a life sentence for a child molester is far less than what I want to see.
This was a very
guilty
pleasure...so awful that I watched with hands over my eyes half the time (while I wasn't laughing so hard I was crying).
Why, because Jiah was so immature and childish, and Bacchan, mixed up guilty, and unsure .
A genuine
guilty
pleasure.
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