Invented
in sentence
758 examples of Invented in a sentence
What Peralta has done, however, is capture enough of the energy of those heady days that we can appreciate what it must have been like when modern skateboarding was
invented
by the Z-Boys.
Alice is the daughter of a prominent scientist who
invented
a device called Mielophone that allows to read minds of humans and animals.
In this case they've
invented
a machine that can capture all of the bunnies that are eating up the crops all over a quiet English village.
But Brian secretly
invented
a robotic dog named CHOMPS, modeled after his own dog Rascal.
Shot on a shoestring in Manhattan and in his acting workshop on ad hoc sets, Shadows was the culmination of months of improvisational rehearsals, in which the (mostly amateur) actors developed bonds with one another,
invented
their characters, and polished their techniques to give their filmed performances just the right tenor of spontaneous familiarity.
It accomplished this through the energetic performances of the leads, the steadiness of the camera-work (avoiding 'rock-video' clichés that were actually
invented
for the Beatles in their first two films), tight editing, and a non-judgmental presentation of the star as human being rather than symbol or god (or demon).
The
invented
yarn takes "The Dirty Dozen" for a ride and sometimes abandons it to pay tribute to other movies.
"The Kite Runner" is one of the most controversial films of the year, and it's not just one of those controversies
invented
by PR people to sell tickets.
Dr. Tobel has
invented
an instrument which greatly aids in the accuracy of aerial bombardment.
I've been a fan of Guest since Spinal Tap but in this movie he has truly achieved what he set out to do in the "mock-umentary," a genre he
invented
and has now perfected.
The phrase "black comedy" was
invented
for this insanity, which is a take-off on Hitchcock's "Strangers on a Train."
What I have seen in local skate parks is what these boys had
invented.
Many animation buffs consider Wladyslaw Starewicz the great forgotten genius of one special branch of the art, puppet animation, which he
invented
almost single-handedly . . .
I would have to say the funniest part was when Dr. Jekyll dozed off on his lab table and inhaled the straw, while snoring, then snorted up the powdered drug he had
invented.
OK. Who ever
invented
this film hates humanity and wants to see them all slit their throats.
Wesley Eure is young inventor Brian Foster, who's
invented
a new crime busting security device in the form of a robot dog, the titular "C.H.O.M.P.S." (It stands for Canine HOMe Protection System).
Not only, are we far from the designed and
invented
character made by Hollwood but we are also far from the film set used to make his stories.
POSSIBLE SPOILER: Starker has
invented
a drug that when placed in the water supply will wake everyone up from the illusion of reality.
A second flaw, just how accurate were the weather instruments 100 years ago (the toilet wasn't even
invented
yet)?
Every cliche ever
invented
for a horror movie can be seen here.
The whole point of this movie to me seemed to attract the "Hardcore Goth kids who think death, destruction, sex, blood, and Satan are the greatest things
invented
since Lava Lamps.
The carnosaurs(who
invented
this lame name anyway?) attack(in boring action sequences where you don't see much happening).
- The game he
invented
as a child which involved stick men being annihilated when they came too close to one another, suggesting that intimacy was the ultimate danger.
First the film is denounced as having been made by Jews; then it is apparently used by Hippler to verify the deceptiveness of Jews (the aforementioned pretense of poverty by ghetto Jews, shown as a means of avoiding taxation, although the Rothschild character's "spin" is that Jews are taxed excessively); finally the Rothschild film is once again execrated for implying that the famed banking family
invented
the checking account.
Initially this awoke my interest, but what eventually surprised was that the new twists and turns (a) were apparently
invented
in order to present us with a typical Hollywood-like product and (b) made the whole storyline improbable!
"Dominique" is one of those films that the expression "slow-as-molasses" must have been
invented
for.
Everything about this film is simply terrible: the musical score (someone shoot the guy who
invented
the Yamaha keyboard), the script, the directing, the cinematography, the acting.
minutes of nothing thank you who ever
invented
the fast forward button.
Yes I know "talkies" had just been
invented
for the cinema 2 years earlier when this was produced in 1929 but this film showed that much had to learnt about the art of producing films.It comes over as a filmed "hammy" stage play with the actors melodramatically enunciating their lines,rolling their eyes, using too many pregnant pauses and using gestures more appropriate to silent cinema, which I suppose was normal during the process of educating them to appear more naturalistic on screen.The gaps between lines spoken should have been tightened up during editing as it considerably slows the film.It is now only of interest for Titanic buffs who want to see an early example of this marine accident on film.In next chronological order they could see "Titanic" (1953) A Night to Remember (1958)"Titanic (1997), to see how the cinema's depiction of this tragedy as evolved over the years.There have been many documentaries and TV films made including the atrocious "SOS Titanic" (1979) On my version which is a DVD, David McCallum gives the introduction.It was he who played Harold Bride Marconi's junior wireless operator in "A Night to Remember"(still the best feature film - please read my "Tribute to Walter" comments on IMDb under Howard Morley.demon.co.uk)and gave the commentary on the series of 4 videos entitled "End of a Dream" so he was well qualified to give the narration.Of more interest I found was a recording accompanied by actual photos of the 1912 US Senate hearing which is also on the DVD.Actors speak the actual words spoken by Lightoller 2nd officer, J Bruce Ismay,Managing director of White Star, Harold Bride and others including Gloria Stewart (The "old Rose" in Titanic 1997) whose voice is used for one of the first class women survivors.
An entirely new vocabulary will have to be
invented
to describe the complete absence of anything even remotely recognizable as 'humor' or even 'entertainment' in "Rabbit Test."
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Years
Would
Their
About
People
World
Called
There
Technology
First
After
Other
Could
Actually
Century
Think
Something
Being
Before