Handful
in sentence
564 examples of Handful in a sentence
A
handful
of likable characters, all recently evicted tenants of a ramshackle apartment building in Mulberry Str; Manhattan, join together in order to survive a deadly virus that broke out in the city overnight.
And so they did.Don't be fooled,this is not an anti - war movie any more than it's big brother "The Dirty Dozen" was.A
handful
of misfits and psychos take on an impossible mission led by a misfit and a psycho.
Martin Landau present, Corbin Bernsen present and a
handful
of other trustees, but the screening went all wrong!
Doc Hollywood is one of only a
handful
of movies that I never tire of watching.
During the Civil War, Union Colonel Pembroke (James Coburn) surrenders his position at Fort Holman to Rebel forces, and once court martialed, makes an offer to Major Charles Ballard to take the fort back with a
handful
of men.
But in those days, there was only a
handful
of techniques you could use.
Dorothy Janis, who apparently only made a
handful
of films in her brief career, is stunningly beautiful and effective as the pagan girl Shoesmith wishes to wed, and Donald Crisp is first rate as Slater, the cad who disguises his lust as an act of Christian charity.
After catching the first two episodes of this show and then taking a gander at this site's message board, it's pretty apparent that it is the teenage girls, and sadly a
handful
of grown women who are attracted to the so-called "Hotti-Gotti" boys as they've been dubbed who continue to watch with regularity and keep this pitiful and wretched excuse for entertainment (which can be likened to a type of mental Novocaine if you ask me) afloat just enough to cause A&E to run a second season or so I've been told anyway.
There are only a
handful
of movies I have evr walked out on because they were so dull they were unwatchable.
Most works of art (or general comments like these) can only address a
handful
of those issues from a single perspective.
His first two Keystone pictures had little plot but allowed his little tramp to interact (chaotically) with a realistic environment, albeit with a
handful
of supporting comedy characters thrown in.
Though undeniably enjoyable, the popular poliziottesco subgenre - which proliferated in Italy throughout the 1970s - is also frustrating because one can never tell the quality of a specific title until one has watched it himself (this is mainly due to the fact that this type of film has been largely dismissed by the critics, while at the same time turned into a cult by fans): the thing is that a
handful
of titles definitely merit a critical re-appraisal, while many others are overrated by the aficionados.
I'd be hard-pressed to even classify this as a 'real' movie...It's more of a display of Penn's attempt at 'riding on the edge' of any conventional-type comedy film, meaning it's an (obviously)'improvisational comedy that centers around a cardgame ('The Grand')...Fairly enough, it's taglined as 'an improvisational comedy...using a
handful
of actors playing characters competing in an actual poker tournament', which is quite accurate...So, you have been warned...I think the problem here (aside from the old 'ust because someone gives you the money to do soething, doesn't mean you should), no the problem is that it's a little 'too improvisational' and feels like it might 'all-be' an improvisation...LIKE NO SCRIPTED LINES WHATSOEVER...It's like a musical where the orchestra didn't have any sheet usic, but a guy going "like this: dong-cha-dong-chucka-dong-dong-dong"...At least that's the way I felt watching this...In fact, the thought 'kept' coming into my mind...I said "self"..."I don't think they had a written script"...
Quite undeservedly if you ask me, because it really isn't such a terrible movie and even benefices from a
handful
of good aspects, like a solid cast and engaging CGI-monster effects.
It stars Judy Garland and James Mason, in my opinion two of a
handful
of truly great actors, and Garland's own tragedies gave the story an extra frisson and force.
There are a
handful
of moments where you will laugh out loud, but the storyline fails to hold your interest in between.
There have been less than a
handful
of really good monster movies ("Alien", "Aracnaphobia" and "Tremors") in the last quarter century, so no one should expect SciFi Channel movies to be theater quality, particularly their "Creature Features".
In this tiny town -- and really that's being charitable; hamlet is more appropriate -- there are but a
handful
of inhabitants and only three apparent businesses (saloon, store, and undertaker), no court or jail, no regular transportation services, no communications, no government offices of any kind, no mayor, and no law enforcement, yet a busily occupied lawyer?
For every laugh, and there is a small
handful
of them, almost anyone on the street could have re-written the joke to be funnier.
I'd wager a VERY few
handful.
True, a small
handful
of the trailers are useless (thankfully relegated closely to the end, such as 'Superfuzz', and one or two others), but for the most part this collection is superb.
Although there were a
handful
of Technicolor films before this one (as early as 1922), this is the one that EVERYONE saw and so truly introduced the process to the nation.
Dylan's role seems to be an afterthought; he mumbles only a
handful
of lines, the most significant being the reading of food can labels.
Anyway, with only a
handful
of mildly bloody killings, this film should barely appeal to Lewis' usual rabid fans.
This movie features more than a
handful
of well-choreographed fight scenes that leave you asking, "How'd they do that?"
In the technical sense this is "limited" animation - the
handful
of animators (just four are credited) charged with bringing the story to life restrict themselves, when they can, to less than the full 24 frames per second, and often use all manner of cunning tricks to avoid having to animate at all.
VITUS is a Swiss film,that has just been released to DVD from playing in ONLY a
handful
of theatres from July to October 2007.
Though not a huge explosion of these types of films have popped up, there is a
handful
out there, such as "Strawberry Estates," "The St. Francisville Experiment," and "The Collingswood Story."
I can say that I've only seen a
handful
of films he's been in, but anytime I do, he is phenomenal.
One of director Alfred Hitchcock's groaners, a COMEDY which takes place in a sleepy New England town where a Bostonian man lays dead in the woods from a gunshot wound; the thin plot revolves around a
handful
of kooky residents who each have a run-in with the corpse.
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