Handed
in sentence
518 examples of Handed in a sentence
I know that as I have grown older I have come to realize that there is more to life than complaining about the "Raw Deal" I have been
handed.
guess now i really appreciate the culture that has been
handed
down.and
And in 1969, Aldrich
handed
the directing reins (producing only this time) to Lee H. Katzin, for what may be viewed as the third in a loose trilogy of films dealing with geriatric battleaxes (or aging gargoyles, as my buddy Rob prefers to call them) having at each other with no quarter given.
All this is
handed
down to us by an extremely heavy-handed director (Giovanni is responsible for writing some of the best scripts in French cinema and should have left directing to directors), complete with lines such as "People will march on the streets!" and Gabin's final judgment on society "It's a killing machine".
I thought to myself "This might be worth a go" and
handed
over my hard-earned coinage to the foreign bloke behind the stall.
The Academy Awards of 2006 will be remembered as the year Scorsese finally won his Oscar and the year of evenly
handed
out Oscars and little real surprises.
The awards were evenly
handed
out and there was no big winner, although "The Departed" of course won the most important awards.
But the book told a story that was truly creative without heavy
handed
moralizing.
All of the best (and pretty much only) funny gags are in the trailer, and what we are left with is a preachy, poorly acted, heavy
handed
PSA.
I eventually skipped to the "action" parts and this movie still came up empty
handed.
The parts where they are
handed
there jobs through lottery (a jab at communism?)and the old man with the pipes.
Well acted (mostly) and beautifully filmed, the movie suffers from a ham
handed
script and dubious direction.
I am a big fan of the fifties, because it is the decade in which I started watching movies, but I am also aware that relatively low budgets and heavy
handed
censorship made even the best fifties films somewhat dubious -- e.g.
In trying to jumpstart itself, this movie is somewhat heavy
handed
at the beginning, taking one notably big and questionable dramatic risk, but gains power slowly and turns into something of a monumental mini-epic with John Payne's changes of hair coloring registering his slow and merciless journey toward a godless end...what a performance, but it's not as good as Gloria McGehee's as the unwanted wife Lorry - which is about as good as you'll ever see from an actress on screen, period.
Instead, I'm
handed
crap.
The actors appear to have been
handed
the orders "ham it up!"
I like Mary Walsh as a CBC satirist and she's created and played some funny newfie characters, but it's obvious that for this movie, she took the cash and
handed
in a quickly-written piece of doggy doo doo.
The urinary outpourings of Gaiman's clammy
handed
word processor make me want to reach for an Ebola-spiked cyanide capsule.
Charlton Heston found his definitive role here, as the last man on earth, a scientist fighting a single
handed
battle against hundreds of mutant creatures of the night.
The czar Nicholas I, tired of the endless fight that is costing him money and armies, gives a letter to Princess Maria (Scilla Gabel) to be
handed
to her husband Prince Sergei (Gerard Herter), containing instructions to negotiate a peace treaty with the rebels.
Beautifully shot, with two of the best performances of the decade by Hopkins and Hurt, this movie is a true masterpiece, managing to be moving without being sappy, and offering a message about human nature without being too heavy
handed.
Only slightly less impressive than Fuller's debut is this, his second film, with an excellent and slightly restrained Vincent Price as the eponymous title character, another true-life minor figure in the history of the Old West: James Addison Reavis, who in the 1880s concocted a grand schemed to defraud the United States of a large chunk of the then-territory of Arizona through forged documents showing a Spanish land grant
handed
down for a century and a half to the woman he was to make his bride.
He plays a tired old cop who is
handed
the menial task of driving Mos Def, a criminal, who has to testify in court.
I can remember him being received as almost a movie star on that visit and to see Sonderbergh treat that event, as well as the entire revolution, so even
handed
was excellent film making to me.
The dad is a complete wimp (he's
handed
a grenade and says "What do I do?"...that really cracked my kids up).
Halfway through the film he
handed
me the 5.00 without saying a word.
Everything is heavy handed, and when it seems that the filmmakers couldn't think of anymore ridiculous action sequences they filled it in with over-drawn, slow motion explosions, slow motion scenes of John Cena running, or slow motion scenes of a car flying through the air.
Its kind of sad too, because I really like most everyone in this movie, but as we all know the best actors in the world cannot save a lame script and ham
handed
direction.
In fact, he
handed
in one of the most convincing performances I've seen from a child actor in a very long while, because 99% of the time, the children of celebrities are precocious, annoying and predictable.
I am proud to report that as much as a a non professional can, I approached the character much like Mr. Lane did.(Only with a bit more heavy
handed
shouting)Jean Smart is always a treat to watch in anything she does, and I agree, that the role of Banjo was handled with the appropriate lunacy.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Heavy
Their
Being
After
There
Would
Without
Other
About
Should
Movie
Years
Paper
Money
Little
Power
Letter
Could
While