Interview
in sentence
736 examples of Interview in a sentence
I saw an
interview
with Rob Schneider (who plays the lead character, Marvin Mange, in this film.)
Akhras agree to speak with her."why should I?" she says.(since the movie was made the home has been destroyed- apparently the
interview
didn't result in what she wanted- so bring on the bulldozers)Mrs Levy claimed that she "wanted the movie to be cathartic as well as a symbol of hope, a chance to transcend entrenched hatreds"- instead she uses it as an excuse to harangue Ayats mother, while dangling the house as a carrot.Moreover although the two women live only 4 miles apart, she is so out of touch with the realities of the occupation for her Palestinian neighbors, that she really thinks that Mrs. Akhras can just drop over for a cup of coffee?Please.And she forgoes the one chance she had to meet Mrs. Akhras in person and see what kind of life she lives.(the
Maybe it was the title, or the trailer (certainly not the
interview
on the DVD, which is with the director as he keeps saying "hi, kids" into the camera like a buffoon), but I had expectations for Entrails of a Virgin to be at least a bit of sleazy fun with some good sex scenes and brutal, bloody killings by a weird Japanese penetrator.
How did the
interview
with the first girl-crush ("...who now works in a travel agency") and members of Freddy's first school band contribute to what I really want to know about Mercury?
In an interview, David Duchovny said he hasn't been able to watch even the first hour of this film - and neither should you.
In an
interview
on the making of "The Batman," one of the artists or writers (I'm unsure which) said that "We felt we shouldn't mess with Batman, but we could mess with the villains."
And if you believe an
interview
with Hines on the Pendragon website, this film had an 8 figure budget!
In an
interview
with "Fangoria" in 1987, Eisley recalled that Herbert Strock had directed the bulk of the film, but somehow Kenneth Hartford--who only directed the footage featuring his children Andrea and Glenn (portraying characters named Andrea and Glenn, in a particularly inventive turn)--received full credit.
Kusturica said in an
interview
from 2004 that when he is making movies, he feels like making music, and when he is making music, he feels like making movies.
A reporter, Craig Milford, who works for The James Keller Public Telecommunication Center, has an
interview
with a German professor of a Floridian university, who made an unknown creature based upon some substance of meteor(s).
What they did was to collect the little material that they had, shaky blurry videos and to
interview
some people about Joe Strummer at a camp fire.
I thought it interesting that in a lengthy
interview
with producer Michael Hausman included on the DVD, he disclosed that the two stars had "very different ideas" about the script, that the director was nearly impossible to work with, that the director of photography had impossible demands made of him, that the crew was constantly angry about being made to sit around waiting, and so on.
The only highlight of the movie is the
interview
of a Swedish couple who were befriended with J.B. Lenoir and show their private video footage as well as tell stories.
On the DVD extras, the
interview
with Quentin Tarentino, who is obviously stoned, is a gas.
Mellisa crying and refusing to do an exit interview, just proves to America what everyone thought, you are a spoiled baby.
(The written
interview
with the director on the "Special Features" section of the DVD is definitely worth reading if you have the time.)
It has tons of candid moments from the set, outtakes and a great
interview
with the director.
Well-made but basically dreary low-life melodrama which, according to the accompanying
interview
with lead Isabelle Huppert, writer/director Pialat infused with a good deal of autobiographical detail; given the mainly unsympathetic characters involved, it doesn't do him any compliments - and he does seem to have been a troubled man, as Huppert also says that Pialat often disappeared for days on end during the shoot!
Filmmaker David Redmon should be lauded for getting excellent and rare footage of everyday life inside a Chinese factory compound, and for landing a revealing on-camera
interview
with the head of the U.S. company that imports and sells the beads.
The DVD extras are worth it because they it gives a different view of how the wrestlers act after the show (such as the chris benoit interview/edge interview), some glimpse into the Monday Night Wars era,the first match of Hogan winning tag title gold and some promotional talk.
He says in an
interview
that if he made it again it would be different, but not necessarily better.
Some commentators called the
interview
snippets with the artist a weak spot, but consider this: why would you expand on this in a movie, if you can read Andy's musings at length in his books, or attend one of his excellent lectures?
Lee Chang Dong, director and writer of this movie, said in an interview, "In a vast sense, I wanted to express what love is and this movie could be a melodrama in a sense.
Some thirty years ago, Author Numa Sadoul published a book length
interview
with the Belgian comic book artist Georges Remi (better known as Herge, the creator of Tintin).
This movie catches up with Sadoul today as he recalls the interview, while we listen to the cassettes (Herge died in 1983) and see some old photos and footage of the man himself.
Some parts of the
interview
were not published in the book at the request of Herge, and we now know these dealt with his separation from his wife, after he had an affair with one of his collaborators (who years later would become his second wife).
When I read an
interview
with the director in the local paper and he said that one of his influences was Clerks, I started to get interesting.
Watching John Cassavetes film, Opening Night, I was reminded of something that Quentin Tarantino said once in an
interview
about personal experience in being a creator of art or acting.
It's based on a taped
interview
of Georges Remi a.k.a.
The interesting aspect of "The Apprentice" is it demonstrates that the traditional job
interview
and resume do not necessarily predict teamwork skills, task dedication, and job performance.
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