Largely
in sentence
3412 examples of Largely in a sentence
This series goes from the opposite to R. Still this first one and only good one is worth some chuckles
largely
due to Bill Murray.
Mr Omar Sharif,who built a career
largely
founded on looking directly at the camera with his big brown eyes and looking soulful,gives a stupefyingly monotonous performance as his son the Crown Prince.He is utterly unconvincing as a man who -in the movie at least-cut a swathe through the distaff side of the Austrian aristocracy.With his well-buttered locks firmly in place he preens and poses in ever more unlikely uniforms.As a rebel he talks the talk but conspicuously fails to walk the walk,leaving a bottom button undone on one of his tunics is about as far as his defiance goes.Unhappily married,he falls in love with a commoner."Forbidden
Released upon a Fremantle DVD, this
largely
lustreless affair depicting a man 'neath the spell of a seductress does benefit from top-flight visual and sound quality, and although no extra features are provided, the above-average production quality enhances able efforts from cinematographer Robert Primes and composer Stephen Edwards.
Cyborg 3 does manage to be better than the other two entries but it still is a
largely
dull feature.
The "zombies" here, as little as they are in the film, are
largely
metaphors for subservience to the state or authority in general, as in wartime.
Yeah, I "get" Pasolini and his milieu, but at the same time, I feel his "Decameron" is
largely
overrated, and more than a little disturbing.
Celia is employed as a highly motivated probation officer for the County of Los Angeles, while her evil natured twin has become an iconic figure within her fetishistic world
largely
because of erotic performances upon CD-ROMS, but when disaster befalls "Mistress Vanessa", virtuous Celia, determined to unearth her sister's vicious attacker, begins a new job as a "sex slave" at the private Castle Club where the specialty of the house is a "dungeon party".
This film, along with The Kentucky Fried Moovie, is one of the earlier attempts at spoofs, which became so popular in the 80's & 90's, thanks
largely
to Airplane!.
But thanks to the ravenous tomatoes hordes, the obnoxious "Puberty Love" song, and the awesome helicopter crash scene, Attack of the Killer Tomatoes does provide some goods, though
largely
for the wrong reasons.
The template used in most of these films was to hire recognizable American actors, whose careers were
largely
in decline and dub their voices.
However, it soon becomes apparent that this is a
largely
pointless film that isn't going to go anywhere.
Filmed in Canada; presumably by a
largely
Canadian crew and cast.
Not because it was one of the worst ever made (it wasn't), but
largely
because it's about 20 years old and oh-so-out of the mainstream.
But to me, the cast was
largely
squandered, their personalities muffled by the masks, while the direction I think of as being unusually static, and the photography murky.
The Big Foot family doesn't take kindly to this, and proceeds to pick off the team one by one,
largely
offscreen.
Largely
dense road movie with some comic relief provided by the excellent John Cleese (although he is really sending up his performance in Fawlty Towers).
The film
largely
consists of endless shootouts that quickly become monotonous - especially when most of the time you are seeing the bad guys armed with machine guns constantly missing Larson and him armed only with a revolver (that NEVER runs out of bullets) taking them all out rather easily.
It has some cute moments (the ones you've seen in the trailer) but the actors are
largely
wasted.
I gather that was due
largely
to being as big a tough guy off-screen as on and getting in one sleazy scrape after another.
Naturally if you mix a quaint Cornish village -
largely
populated by retired genteel ladies - with a liberal dose of marijuana, a certain amount of silliness will ensue.
(Or perhaps they already have, since this film was
largely
dumped, with little fanfare and deadly word-of-mouth.)
The mostly blah acting from a
largely
insipid cast doesn't help matters any; only George Cleveland as the hearty General Duval and E. Alyn Warren as the irascible Dr. Trevissant manage to enliven things a bit with their welcome and refreshing hammy histrionics.
The cast are
largely
awful and mainly very average looking too.
The film gives a rather condensed version of what is contained in the book, which as far as I can tell by doing some research and investigative fact checking is
largely
a work of fiction.
Much is made of the "warship as a microcosm of British Society"theme,and the crew
largely
comprises of the usual cheery cockneys,canny northerners etc.without whom no war can be fought.They spend most of their time on board smoking,moaning about Lord Haw Haw and getting blown up.
As a long-time fan of all the Star Trek series,I found this a disappointing episode, and I wonder if the liberal use of "flashbacks" featuring Will Riker's exploits, both positive (and
largely
romantic) and negative (lots of pain, and a crewmate's death)was a money-saving device, as were many of their "bottle shows" (episodes in which all scenes take place on the Enterprise).
Here, Ms. Scrooge is a miserly banker who takes advantage of the employees and customers in the
largely
poor and black neighborhood it inhabits.
While the central courtroom action holds the attention – thanks
largely
to a commanding performance by Anne Bancroft as Hemingway’s lawyer – the film is too often merely glossy, but also dramatically unconvincing: the jury ostensibly takes the musician’s side because a) the girl invited assault due to the sensuous nature of her profession and b) she was offering no resistance to her presumed aggressor when her sister arrived at the apartment and inadvertently saw the couple in bed together.
The basics of the plot
largely
copy Richard Donner's original, and see a young couple adopt a child, which they name Delia (not Damiella or Damiana, fortunately).
My recommendation is take this movie with a grain of salt, it is a good story and based on true events however the details of the movie (at least the Nichole Timmons - Glenn Park portion) are
largely
inaccurate and depict the failure of the director to discover the truth in telling the story.
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