Lucky
in sentence
1055 examples of Lucky in a sentence
I was very
lucky
to see it at the 2007 Newport Beach Film Festival.
He was groomed for it, and CBS was darned
lucky
to get him.
Maybe we'll all get
lucky
and it will be out on DVD in the near future.
No happy go
lucky
Uncle Toms willing to cater to the Master in all things.
I was
lucky
enough to be able to preview this film on October 6, in Greenville, SC with my wife.
Lucky
Break in 2 words would be utter rubbish, it was not funny, in fact it had about 1 jocks worth of laughter and it was just pretty boring.
I was
lucky
enough to see this with my dad (cool guy) when I was a kid at the Cinerama Dome in Hollywood.
By chance, this movie caught my attention late-night and I was
lucky
enough to watch from start to finish.
I think
"Lucky"
went to the federal pen.
Beautiful movie from a true master Peter Bogdanovich.Truly warm movie about a boy Rocky who has a rare disease so people often think he's wearing a mask.But he was
lucky
because he had a family.Maybe not kind of family we all think about when we hear that word,but he had a true family who loved him till the end.His family was mother,drug addict and bunch of bikers.All of them saw something in Rocky and that something was his inside and not outside.Story is very good and you can relate it to any other story from todays life.This isn't just a story about boy with weird face,it's a story about whole society,family and mostly about people.What is really important to us people?How we look from the outside or from the inside.Only girl who connected with Rocky was a blind girl.Isn' that tragic how we,people have wrong priorities in life.Excellent movie that really touched me and also some great performance from Eric Stoltz,Cher and Sam Elliott.All time story with great directing and good acting.
I am
lucky
where I am they air "Heres Lucy" on weekdays so I have seen many episodes.
If you must ignore my warnings and you insist on watching this movie, by the end you will be
lucky
that this movie only wasted 75 minutes of your time as opposed to 2 hours.
I was
lucky
enough to see this little slice of film crime noir at the LACMA during the weekly Tuesday Matinée, and let me tell you, but for all the old ladies and grandpas in the theater I felt I had been transported back to the golden age of Los Angeles Film Noir.
They were
lucky
enough to win against the odds, at least for a time, but in this interview, they also mentioned something about believing the phenomenon would go on forever.
They wanted 1,000 and I think were
lucky
to get 100 if that but I know not near as many showed up in the 90-100 degree weather sporting their winter attire.
The sadness was normally due to the innocent victim (who was usually a beautiful woman) being murdered in an unjustified fashion, such as Desdemona in 'Othello'; the anger would have been directed towards the villain in the play whose dastardly deeds had resulted in the deaths of heroes and heroines - here we have Iago, arguably the most evil character in the history of literature ('Othello' again); sympathy was not for the devil, but for the poor people who had overcome the denouement but had to deal with its consequences (Horatio perhaps in 'Hamlet', or maybe Father Laurence in 'Romeo and Juliet'); and lastly relief was felt because the audience had survived the play's violence and could thank their
lucky
stars that they did not have to live in a world so cruel.
In this day of $100 million plus movies with special effects that drown out the dialog and stars with out-sized egos and paychecks to match, a film like Jonathan Demme's minor masterwork, "Melvin and Howard," would be
lucky
to get a video distributor.
Sam is kept in an intricately locked cage along with another victim who isn't so
lucky
in the long run...
I actually tried to see Thelma and Louise at the cinema when Night on Earth came out, but as it was sold out, I saw this instead - what a
lucky
break!
Lucky
it was short or did I just block out all the bad scenes making it seem short?
Not my cup of tea but still some people are hunting this one down so I should be
lucky
to have found it.
To be quite honest I just got in to Asylum recently and have been
lucky
enough to interview the director of this movie, Leigh Scott.
The dentist is the
lucky
one.
Let me say bravo to the cast,crew and director you all should be proud a film I was
lucky
enough to see at the HMC film fest with a packed theater.
I consider myself pretty
lucky
that my parents can afford to throw me a Sweet 16 party.
Wendell Corey, at first seemingly miscast, does embody the role of the "Happy go
Lucky"
nice guy that the part calls for.
Apart from the film's American title change, the print was edited drastically (and in some cases incoherently) resulting in an uneven and less enjoyable film than the one that those
lucky
audiences in Britain were able to see when the film had its UK premiere in 1947.
It should be so
lucky.
I was
lucky
to discover Kitano's famous style in the release of Sonatine and Hana-bi in a small movie theater in Paris.
I was
lucky
enough to see 59 out of 89 minutes of this tv film and would recommend it to anyone who is interested in the culture of Avant Garde Germany in the 1920's, the link between Weill and the American musicals genre, opera, the relationship between Weill, Bertolt Brecht and Lotte Lenya.
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