Involving
in sentence
1210 examples of Involving in a sentence
It also dips into melodrama in a couple scenes
involving
Dennis Hopper's stock villain, and some of the other characters needed to be fleshed out more.
I saw the preview and found myself laughing hysterically at some of Dana's remarks and looking forward to seeing the movie (little did I know that such jokes as "the Neapolitan ice-cream" debate would be omitted to make room for crap like the fart jokes
involving
the ridiculous villain).
The plot of this star-studded film is pretty familiar,
involving
crooked officials and their henchmen trying to steal the claims and gold of hardworking miners, along with a somewhat troubled romance between the hero and a dancehall queen with a heart of gold.
I expected a 'different' kind of story-line from Seinfeld, and, sure enough, the plot included an interesting twist
involving
bees, a courtroom, and nefarious humans.
The film is a wonderful portrayal of a dark triangle
involving
identical twins who form an elegant acrobatic circus act and eventually seek revenge on an unfaithful women.
Slightly overrated in its day, this is still a solid western with good scenery (Death Valley?) and a striking Indian attack
involving
barrages of incoming arrows.
Average road comedy that has average production quality and nothing original or new to offer as all presented here have been done better in other films of the same genre.Although still funny at times and big fans of the lead actors here will be entertained because they will see that they still have their talents in 1999.Goldie and Steve are certainly the main attractios here and they did a great performance.Very funny scenes at the last 20 minutes
involving
a drugged out Steve.Not a big fan of road comedies and the lead actors?Stay away then.....
There's only one real Gidget - this one - which was followed by several inferior movie and television productions, none
involving
Dee.
And there's a love story
involving
a girl Caleb meets named Cole, played by the beautiful and hugely talented Mackenzie Firgins.
A reasonably involving, decent drama, but obviously Ken Loach's main concern it to unable us to have a clearer idea of what is really going on with our 'brave new world', globalization, we all need to work harder to compete, people in China need to work harder, everyone needs to work harder, and out of this sinister scam, unending progress etc. there is still half a billion people on planet hearth who don't have enough to eat and a few people filling their pockets.
There is so much tragedy that takes place in the world
involving
the military and others involved in physical conflict, yet it is rare that a soldier comes forward to tell the truth.
Basically this was a good way to get children to learn the Constitution and the three branches of government
involving
two beloved cartoon characters.
Although "You Only Live Once" creaks a bit here and there, I must say that this in one very
involving
film.
The secondary story
involving
her father never meshes with the main story, and the brief scenes with the lead character's friends sharing conversation at a table don't reveal anything, other than an off-putting smugness in the dialogue.
(These moments
involving
her father and her friends do raise the question of how this movie managed to get James Woods and Rosario Dawson to sign on.)
No thrills, no action, cinematography that gets painfully awful at some times and a final shot
(involving
a swarm of more killer dots) portraying that this silly nightmare isn't over yet.
Although the remake in 2003 was excellent and had a tighter, more
involving
plot than this film, it breaks a barrier because rather than directly approaching the style of the remake and trying to live up to its success, this equally grisly thriller ignores all of the gloss, cinematography, pacing and story that it was inspired from.
The movie is basically about a eventful but hectic night in 1962 that has friends cruising up and down the main street and also some wild escapades
involving
mooning, spraying shaving cream on car windows, and tying the wheels on a police car to break apart.
It's a true american classic
involving
a down on his luck man (Paul Le Mat, so great as Milner in "American Graffiti") who gives a ride to an injured hitchhiker in the desert that turns out to be none other than Howard Hughes (Jason Robards, who is brilliant in a small, understated performance).
There is an uninteresting romantic subplot
involving
the rich woman's nephew.
Recent trends in film narrative have witnessed the proliferation of multiple 'petite' narratives
involving
a series of inter-related characters who are all inter-connected in some way: pioneered by "Short Cuts" and followed by the likes of "Pulp Fiction", "Happiness", and the more recent "Magnolia".
The subplot
involving
Marini's gay brother's desperation over unrequited love for an imprisoned stud (which is all magically settled by the end) is merely boring.
Actually, the version I watched may have been cut as the "Stracult" book mentions an unforgettable sex scene
involving
eels - but, here, this is over before it has even begun as we're rushed to its messy aftermath!!
It's an example of the era's Filipino horror output - and not one of the best (!!!) either - mom is supposed to be dead but she's locked in the basement and has turned into a vampire, and bites her son, and quite limited action ensues, some
involving
locals in blackface as happy slaves.
I probably haven't seen this much drug content
involving
teens since I saw the film "Kids".
"Nowhere" has it all, including its share of sexual tensions between all of the characters, as well as random outbursts of insanity (at one point
involving
a character being brutally killed with a can of Campbell's tomato soup).
Her older sister instructed her on how to cry during the film, suggesting that she recall a ghastly accident she had witnessed
involving
her dog being hit by a car.
After the brilliant First Contact adventure we shared with the crew, we get this lame story
involving
the Enterprise.
David Soul had followed Ron Moody and there is a fight
involving
the attendant and David Soul and the address is retrieved so they can both find the dog.
Yes, Big Wednesday is a classic 'coming out age' story set in Vietnam era America
involving
a group of school friends who love to surf.
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