Magazine
in sentence
536 examples of Magazine in a sentence
Renee Zellweger is excellent as a hip urbane
magazine
writer who returns to her suburban Bucks County nest in order to care for mother Streep (who delivers yet another hall-of-fame performance).
Take for example, Vanity
magazine
magnate John Coudair (Otto Kruger): enchanted by Rusty's resemblance to her grandmother Maribelle (also played by Hayworth in flashbacks), whom he wooed devotedly when he fell in love with her, he tries to relive his youth by fixing what he thinks went wrong between himself and Maribelle.
Barbara Stanwyck is a sheer delight in this wartime comedy, about a sailor invited to spend Christmas with a popular
magazine
writer's family, at her farm in Connecticut.
When I reviewed the video for a local magazine, I called it "the greatest achievement in the history of the American cinema."
A
magazine
columnist who writes about life on her farm house when in fact she lives in a NY apartment must come up with a plan when she learns that her publisher and a war hero will spend Christmas with her.
I myself, eventually just went to the Mensa
magazine
and got a $20.00 degree saying I was an (Hon)DDiv.
The skaters I was seeing were the guys we followed in the pages of Skateboarder
magazine
back in the late 70's.
Otto Kruger, (John Coudair),"Duel in the Sun" played the role as a promoter of a cover girl
magazine
and decided Rusty Parker was going to be his top model.
Ebony
magazine
did do a nice article on him, giving him some of his due propers.
Well, I have heard so much about this film, from a
magazine
that named this one of the most shocking movies of all time, my 1001 movies you must see before you die, my sister who saw this at a film festival, and the I love the 70's show on VH1.
One of the best scenes, and actually most insightful, is the interview with Claude Bessy of Catholic Discipline, or 'Kick-Boy' as he was known to Slash
magazine
readers.
I absolutely adore this film about a lady columnist (Barbara Stanwyck) for a major homemaking
magazine
who delivers a welcoming article each month that includes details about her awesome home life as a wife and mother in a beautiful Connecticut home.
Because she lives in a small New York apartment, isn't married, and doesn't have a baby - and can't cook at all! Hilarity (and romance) ensues when she tries to put on a believable act in an effort to save face/ keep from being fired by the
magazine
owner (played by Sydney Greenstreet).
The life of Rusty changes when she participates and wins a contest to be the cover page of the Vanity
magazine.
His best total film appearance in a comedy was probably that of
magazine
publisher Alexander Yardley in "Christmas In Connecticut" (although his autocratic, half-mad soap tycoon in "The Hucksters" is a close second).
The story line is simple : Elisabeth Lane (Barbara Stanwyck) makes out her living by writing culinary columns for a
magazine.
It was in the little TV
magazine
that they distributed at the PX (not really an authorized edition of "TV Guide" but made to resemble it as closely as possible without getting into copyright trouble) that I first learned the real story behind the cancellation.
Mainly instead of a trio, the cameras and
magazine
articles concentrate more on Daniel and Emma, being that they're the leading male and only leading female in the saga leaving Rupert dead-end.
National Lampoon was once a funny
magazine.
Within the first few minutes of this Dutch thriller, we learn that Krabbe is a gay alcoholic writer who sleeps sans underwear, fantasizes about murdering his roommate, tries to steal a
magazine
from a news stand, and lusts after a studly young man he meets at the train station.
Not to be confused with the Madonna film "The Next Best Thing", "The Last Big Thing" is a silly, campy, off-the-wall comedy about a man who yearns to start a
magazine
called "The Next Big Thing" which reviews a variety of up and coming artists.
I then came to discover the WORLD of Doc Savage through the Bantam novels of the old pulp
magazine
stories.
I found it as an offer in a
magazine
and that's why I've seen it.
I cannot for the life of me understand why this mockery of a product is listed in ANY serious film
magazine
or website - I have home-movies of wedding parties that are way better and more interesting.
However, it is simply another story of a frustrated spinster with issues, who hires a paid escort (Dermot Mulroney) she reads about in a Time
magazine
article to travel to London for her sister's London wedding.
And as for security back at Miami Airport... we have an apparently crazy and violent girl running off a plane, chased by cops, who during the chase sits down to have a coffee, moves elsewhere to read a
magazine
at a bar, then runs again like crazy up and down the whole terminal... by now also chased by crazed Cillian Murphy (no CCTV then? - I had guns pulled on me for parking in the wrong place for 10 seconds at Miami Airport a couple of years back).
I read about this movie in a
magazine
and I was intrigued.
After getting a very lucky break he starts work at the highly respected Sharps
magazine
run by a reliably on form Jeff Bridges in New York.
Joyce Reynolds seems a might grown-up for the role of Janie, a boy-crazy sixteen-year old in small town America who ditches her steady guy for a visiting soldier AND winds up on the cover of Life
magazine
(smooching at a blanket party) all in the same week!
JJ's colleagues at the
magazine
are bitchy and opportunistic.
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