Mentions
in sentence
176 examples of Mentions in a sentence
Basically new star Cameron Drake (Matt Dillon) has just won the Academy Award for his latest, where he plays a gay soldier, and he does the usual "thank yous", he even
mentions
his past school English teacher Howard Brackett (Golden Globe nominated Kevin Kline), and he outs him as gay!
Nobody
mentions
Cukor in the same breath as John Ford, Howard Hawks, William Wyler or Billy Wilder and yet, look at his filmography.
Svend and Bjarne are fed up with working for their boss, because he's always putting them down (in fact he
mentions
that they weren't bright enough to unzip before peeing at one point).
What impressed me the most about "One True Thing" was how up-front it was when the daughter
mentions
her mother's cancer at the beginning of the movie.
My DVD sleeve
mentions
David Cronenberg and whilst this is perhaps not quite as good as his best films, there is some similarity here, particularly with the great use of seemingly menacing architecture and the effective and creepy use of inside space.
The recent DVD from Grindhouse Releasing
mentions "
Cat" as an heir apparent to the likes of "Eraserhead," and it does carry a similarly disquieting, awkwardly funny quality associated with the best surrealist art.
When she
mentions
that she was Uncle Wade's favorite and he left her $25,000 (big bucks by 1945 standards), Scott loses interest in poor Hilda and makes a play for Anne.
Sima Qian explicitly
mentions
both the head of General Fan and the dagger rolled up into the map, as well as the dagger being thrown into the brass column.
Even till this day when one
mentions
the song "Susie Q" I always remember the movie.
The characters were underdeveloped to say the least...for example, all of a sudden the man
mentions "
Aren't you trying to complete the film because your mother couldn't?"
Someone
mentions "
Gig Young" and then who appears but Gig Young, the actor!
She is so worried she
mentions
it twice, one right after the other, and gets the same response.
He never ever
mentions
this thing he starred in, though.
The film
mentions
connections in different stories from different countries, but fails to investigate them more thoroughly, which could have given the film some credibility.
It rips off the first movie and even
mentions
the Joshua Project.
Two are play writers and one of the others
mentions
a funny story that happened to a friend of hers.
The film opens with his birthday in which he celebrates by drinking a special elixir that (even the film never mentions) prolongs his life.
Then he
mentions
that the cops said his remains weren't found because he vaporized, but some people believe he bailed out and was hidden by friends in the crowd.
Other reviewers have obviously picked up on it as well because there are several
mentions
of the "first part" and "second part".
In one scene, two older men are talking in a general store and one
mentions
that he had molested a set of sisters before they could tie their shoes.
It talks about the risks associated with the lunar module and
mentions
Armstrong's nearly fatal accident with the training vehicle, as if the trainer and the spacecraft had anything to do with each other.
I won't say much about the plot, which deserves to be discovered by the viewer himself, but the performances are true Oscar material; special
mentions
go out to E. Evstigneev, who plays the old professor with such presence, gravitas and kind wisdom that with barely a word or a gesture, he ends up stealing every scene he's in.
Today if someone
mentions
the name Victor McLaglen the response most likely will be "Who?" or perhaps "Why?"
When Alan
mentions
things of his past, Charlie turns violent towards Alan or anyone who
mentions
his deceased family.
As an aging rocker, this movie
mentions
Heep and Quo - my 2 favourite bands ever - but with the incredible cast (everyone) - and the fantastic storyline - I just love this piece of creative genius.
He runs into Stanley Adams, a Professor Rollo, who realizes that Mulligan is from c. 1890 (he
mentions
President Cleveland).
A marine officer in the film
mentions
this also.
In the trivia section for Pet Sematary, it
mentions
that George Romero (director of two Stephen King stories, Creepshow and The Dark Half) was set to direct and then pulled out.
The Ogre is a film made for TV in Italy and wasn't intended to be a sequel to Demons as Lamberto Bava even
mentions
it on the interview on the Sheirk Show DVD, but it was called Demons III to be part of the Demons series.
One
mentions
he thought the movie, called ZOMBIEGEDDON for Christ's sake, might be a film festival flick.
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