Involving
in sentence
1210 examples of Involving in a sentence
It'll be like looking at a horrible accident
involving
little babies and a gasoline tanker!
STRANGELOVE [1964] and FAIL-SAFE [1964]) and mercifully short, the film's single-minded approach to its subject matter results in a good deal of unintentional laughter - particularly in the scenes
involving
an imminent childbirth and a gang of clueless juvenile delinquents!
Some of the scenes
involving
Gamera, particularly the scenes in Toly, are quite spectacular and have special effects that were pretty decent at the time.
After what seems like an eternity of absolutely nothing happening(well...OK...we are treated to some nudity and a tepid soft sex scene), there is finally a VERY anticlimactic confrontation
involving
a pair 'Nam vets who are making the nature scene and performing some pretty harsh folk ballads with an acoustic guitar.
The characters do and say unimaginably stupid stuff (like descending into the sewers unarmed while they KNOW it's infested with rats), the acting is atrocious and there's a genuinely bizarre sequence
involving
the hero having sex under the influence of growth-serum!
It's got terrible, forced dialogue; pointless plot developments; really drawn out 'spooky imagery' scenes, which look more like a high school remedial art project than a horror movie; 5/10 at best attractive women; long, boring sex scenes
involving
said women (forget what you know about virgins! especially ones with lop- sided fake breasts); muttered, difficult to understand speech from some of the characters; and they actually used the masks from Killer Klowns from Outer Space during a masturbation scene, which should be a saving grace because that movie was pretty funny, but it isn't.
The producers decided to get creative and make this 80's video something of a sci-fi story,
involving
the evil Barbarella villain from which the band got its name.
Unfortunately it turns into a bizarre collage of random "survival events" (including two especially hokey scenes
involving
fighting a bear) and strange hallucinations that make you wonder if this kid isn't just sitting in an alley somewhere on pot dreaming up this whole movie (and what a nightmare it is!).
Just about every scene
involving
the servants of the castle and their silly antics is a waste of time.
It's my opinion that movies
involving
a curse or that draw their basis from a subject that is somewhat esoteric, such as Egyptology, are ripe for silly, overwritten dialogue.
In the case of Gregory's Two Girls, Bill Forsyth has the dubious honour of managing to commit both sins - on the one hand revisiting the plot of Gregory's Girl, while at the same time serving up a frankly incredible and moronic storyline
involving
Scottish arms dealers.
On top of that, it's hard to feel any sympathy for, or empathy with a teacher who has erotic dreams
involving
sex with one of their uniform wearing pupils while they both lie on a pile of gym mats.
It's a concept with few possibilities for good gags and instead Tashlin plays the risqué card more heavily, extended jokes
involving
strippers and scantily clad dancing girls in place of much effective comic relief.
I cannot fault the visuals (when not
involving
alien makeups), and the special effects are impressive.
One of the biggest challenges faced by movies
involving
the supernatural is how to have characters react believably in unbelievable situations.
"A young woman unwittingly becomes part of a kidnapping plot
involving
the son of a movie producer she is babysitting.
Director Michele Lupo keeps the pace moving quickly and there's at least one excellent and creative car chase sequence
involving
Puppo & Gemma.
The movie isn't really all that gory, but there is an EXTREMELY nasty eyeball-munching scene in the middle
involving
a toy maggot (what!?!) Mickey Rooney makes a guest appearance that he probably wasn't too enthusiastic about but needed the money at the time, possibly?
The plot lines
involving
the corrupt hierarchy of the Catholic Church are pretty interesting, since it's based on some actual financial shenanigans at Banco Vaticani in the 1980's, but it's brought too far, again, with the too-spectacular death scenes, etc.
It kept my attention all the way through; the way a terrible, ongoing chain accident in the fog
involving
multiple vehicles keeps one watching to the very end... as, after a ridiculous ray-gun fight in a prison on another planet, a pneumaticaly-disadvantaged sexy and mentally unbalanced bounty hunter chases a retarded extra-terrestrial fugitive---TO EARTH!
The plot written by Sidaris, which was ungratefully passed up by the Academy, is a complex screenplay
involving
many unseen twists and turns.
There is a funny subplot
involving
a tall and not-so-bright player who undergoes hypnosis in order to pass his classes and play like pro basketball player Sydney Wicks.
What is supposed to be a simple generic mystery plot
involving
a dead philanthropist is, in fact, a head-ache inducing tale about a bunch of characters (the only big actor being Ginger Rogers, in a very early role) all trying to find the murderer among a small cast of residents in a posh apartment building.
Since most review's of this film are of screening's seen decade's ago I'd like to add a more recent one, the film open's with stock footage of B-17's bombing Germany, the film cut's to Oskar Werner's Hauptmann (captain) Wust character and his aide running for cover while making their way to Hitler's Fuehrer Bunker, once inside, they are debriefed by bunker staff personnel, the film then cut's to one of many conference scene's with Albin Skoda giving a decent impression of Adolf Hitler rallying his officer's to "Ultimate Victory" while Werner's character is shown as slowly coming to realize the bunker denizen's are caught up in a fantasy world-some non-bunker event's are depicted, most notable being the flooding of the subway system to prevent a Russian advance through them and a minor subplot
involving
a young member of the Flak unit's and his family's difficulty in surviving-this film suffer's from a number of detail inaccuracies that a German film made only 10 year's after WW2 should not have included; the actor portraying Goebbels (Willy Krause) wear's the same uniform as Hitler, including arm eagle- Goebbels wore a brown Nazi Party uniform with swastika armband-the "SS" soldier's wear German army camouflage, the well documented scene of Hitler awarding the iron cross to boy's of the Hitler Youth is shown as having taken place INSIDE the bunker (it was done outside in the courtyard) and lastly, Hitler's suicide weapon is clearly shown as a Belgian browning model 1922-most account's agree it was a Walther PPK-some bit's of acting also seem wholly inaccurate with the drunken dance scene near the end of the film being notable, this bit is shown as a cabaret skit, with a intoxicated wounded soldier (his arm in a splint) maniacally goose-stepping to music while a nurse does a combination striptease/belly dance, all by candlelight... this is actually embarrassing to watch-the most incredible bit is when Werner's Captain Wust gain's an audience alone with Skoda's Hitler, Hitler is shown as slumped on a wall bench, drugged and delirious, when Werner's character begin's to question him, Hitler start's screaming which bring's in a SS guard who mortally wound's Werner's character in the back with a gunshot-this fabricated scene is not based on any true historic account-Werner's character is then hauled off to die in a anteroom while Hitler prepare's his own ending, Hitler's farewell to his staff is shown but the suicide is off-screen, the final second's of the movie show Hitler's funeral pyre smoke slowly forming into a ghostly image of the face of the dead Oskar Werner/Hauptmann Wust-this film is more allegorical than historical and anyone interested in this period would do better to check out more recent film's such as the 1973 remake "Hitler: the last 10 day's" or the German film "Downfall" (Der Untergang) if they wish a more true accounting of this dramatic story, these last two film's are based on first person eyewitness account's, with "Hitler: the last 10 day's" being compiled from Gerhard Boldt's autobiography as a staff officer in the Fuehrer Bunker and "Downfall" being done from Hitler's secretary's recollection's, the screen play for "Der Letzte Akte" is taken from American Nuremberg war crime's trial judge Michael Musmanno's book "Ten day's to die", which is more a compilation of event's (many obviously fanciful) than eyewitness history-it is surprising that Hugh Trevor Roper's account,"The last day's of Hitler" was never made into a film.
Indeed, after the initial setup
involving
the ten million lira scam, the picture devolved into a fairly routine revenge flick with a minor twist in the identity of Rick's (Al Cliver) character.
It seemed to have done something
involving
the projects he chose.
When he finds out, there is an accident
involving
Harry losing an arm.
Started off with plenty of sex and sleazy settings, followed by some good death scenes
involving
the Chinese Organized Crime Squad and a 7-foot, leather-aproned butcher... What put me out of the movie was the tough 'hero' with the guns and a grudge saving the day...
I would call this movie mediocre, at best, since a premise mainly
involving
obnoxious young people being slaughtered in a seedy porno theater, doubling as a hideout for the mafia, is appealing to me.
It's like the student's drawing that was torn up by one of the teachers, all the footage for this film was cut up in a freak accident
involving
a meat-grinder, and left half the stock destroyed, with the other half spliced into two-second bits.
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