Letters
in sentence
985 examples of Letters in a sentence
The great James Cagney, top-billed in big letters, doesn't show up till the movie's second third, and probably has less screen time than Dudley Digges, who plays the eee-vill reform-school potentate.
If you appreciate the satire in it, find Swift's "A Modest Proposal" and his "Drapier's Letters."
Harold Gould plays an inept surgeon who shuts his eyes when the knife digs in,Richard Lenz(whose "pompous ass" reporter in "The Shootist" was booted in the rear by John Wayne)plays the patient who exposes the fraud(he only came in for a chest x-ray,until they discovered he owns a house).Also in the cast on screen(and supplying some excellent country-flavored music)is Keith Allison,former guitarist for Paul Revere and the Raiders,who also worked with Michael Nesmith on a few Monkees recordings(and co-wrote "Auntie's Municipal Court" with Nesmith on 1968's "The Birds,the Bees,and the Monkees").Alas,there is some missing footage from this print,including a topless sequence with Uschi Digard near the end,also a scene with actress Kathleen Freeman(who wants to use green stamps to finance her operation),who gets locked by Sellers in his office,never to be seen again(in the uncut version,he returns to his office to find that she has written in large
letters
on the wall "UNFAIR PRICK" ; his response?
Loved the shots of airports -- Dallas, Phoenix, Fresno, etc., just single buildings with the name in block
letters
on the roof.
He has to find all eight
letters
in order to spell M-O-T-O-R-A-M-A.
You know all those
letters
to "Father Christmas" and "Jesus" that are sent every year?
If it was Royal Mail, most
letters
get this sort of treatment anyway.
It's got Christopher Lee, it's got huge banks of 1970s computers that make Teletype noises as
letters
appear on the screen, it's got radioactive isotopes that not only glow in the dark but emit pulsing thrumming noises, it's got volcanoes!
Same string of
letters
two entirely different meanings.
For some reason, the director feels compelled to tell us the time of day every few minutes by flashing it in big white
letters
across the screen.
While using archival film and
letters
lends the film a fresh and interesting perspective, too often the material selected to highlight simply isn't very interesting (such as when Goebbels complains about this or that ailment, &tc., or the ad nauseam footage of his small German hometown).
It was the birthplace of the dean of American letters; it was where a young reporter named Samuel Clemens began using the name "Mark Twain" and went on to become America's most famous writer.
Look, I don't need a 10 page dissertation or a sign with big
letters
explaining a plot to me.
As Paul says in one of his
letters "
If Christ did not rise from the dead, our faith is vain".
Oh, another great idea: instead of the numbers to identify x,y,z coordinates of the room (cube 1997), this time it is 3 letters, each one giving one of 26 possible coordinate values.
I could probably crap out alphabet soup, rearrange what was left of the letters, and still have a better script.
Then they start rolling the title credits: You see "Slugs!" in big letters, followed shortly thereafter by "The Movie."
And of course, the hosts of "The 700 Club" are always willing to read
letters "
written by viewers" as they like to put it, coincidentally each typed in the same format and all on the same color of paper by "viewers" supposedly healed of various afflictions by the said hosts (they claim to have "words of knowledge" come to them) but who NEVER APPEAR on the program to say what happened to them.
From the start, you know this is a Sam Sherman film more than an Al Adamson film because as the credits roll, "A Sam Sherman Production" appears in
letters
as big as the title credit.
It also calls out CODEPENDENCE in capital
letters.
Plus she found some
letters
in Jessica Albas bag.
Nevertheless, this DVD does have an excellent extra feature, covering
letters
from the WWI front lines, thus making this rental not a total waste of my time.
The plot about mailing the 17
letters
was fine at first, until Josh's "look at me, I'm wacky" approach began infesting each and every scene.
In many ways this film reminded me of the old style of Japanese classic film-making from the 1940's and 1950's that I've come to love so much, such as seen in Yasujiro Ozu pictures -- the title credits even begin in the same way, with the Japanese
letters
(characters) in red against neutral color burlap material.
Letters
with no destination end up in another world found in the back rooms of the post office.
He travels the country at a hectic pace, reaching out to the campesinos, addressing huge crowds, hugging and kissing ordinary people, accepting
letters
on scraps of paper, and hearing pleas for help.
Set in World Depression Era Prague, this is the story of an ambitious store clerk who is falling in love with a mystery woman with whom he has exchanged romantic letters, only to discover that the mystery woman is none other than the sales girl from his shop, who seems to be constantly bickering with the colleague.
When a dead father leaves
letters
behind advising of a hidden treasure it not only brings two families together but starts a whirlwind adventure.
Corbin Bernsen's sent
letters
to four criminal associates he's worked with in the past and it's a real intergenerational mix with Fred Gwynne, Lou Diamond Phillips, William Russ, and Ruben Blades.
Sweet romantic drama/comedy about Stewart and Sullavan writing love
letters
to each other without either one knowing who the other is.
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