Mirror
in sentence
581 examples of Mirror in a sentence
Bret Carr holds up a
mirror
unlike any filmmaker has.
You know her: she's trained three of her last three bosses, knows where all of the bodies are buried and might even look back at you in the
mirror
when you brush your teeth.
The repeated intrusions Cassie made during try-outs appear to
mirror
the almost desperate pleas one often has to make when engaging in the artistic professions in the absence of talent and/or luck.
Not their best in comparison to their earlier work probably because this was the actual last film they did for Roach because he wanted to
mirror
the "big" studios and go into making features exclusively and also wanted to hurry up and finish their contractual obligation.
The Devil chooses the student's reflection in his
mirror.
In shock after seeing his face in the
mirror
(can you blame him?),
The plot centers on two antique dealers that stumble upon a strange object resembling a mirror, but it's actually an ancient scrying device that can be used to summon Choronzhon; the demonic guardian of the abyss.
The
mirror
is heavily desired by a satanic cult since they need it for their ceremonies, but Michael is reluctant to sell it before knowing the real value of the device.
The story is set around a colony of ants and their struggle against the evil Grasshoppers who come back every year and steal their food ( A
Mirror
of the Magnifiscent seven).
In this truly fascinating, dark film, a young impoverished student sells his soul to the devil for a lot of money, in return the devil takes his
mirror
image (this is done brilliantly in the movie and eerily presaged when Balduin, the student is earlier practicing swordsmanship in front of the mirror), a visual metaphor for a "man at war with himself" which portents his immediate future.
Some of the scenes are incredible, the sense of doom when the Devil disappears with Balduin's
mirror
image is amazing, as is the sense that his pact has forever cut him off from human society (the scene where he runs away from his double and ends up in the 'wasteland' at the edge of the town, no longer entirely human (he has lost his soul) he is like a hunted animal outside of human society.
Stand in front of a mirror, and make some scary faces.
Example: the book "Let's Get Invisible" doesn't instantly reveal who the being behind the
mirror
is, but the show has a dead giveaway as he wears a jersey with BACKWARD LETTERING - just plain cheesy!
Pass this lemon by and don't look in the rear view
mirror.
And - SPOILER - as someone else already mentioned, how can you defeat a demon simply by breaking a mirror???).
Guys, the next time you look in the
mirror
and don't like what you see, try telling yourself that at least you're not Rondo Hatton.
And at one point Cary Grant is sent to gather some clothes for his wife and a psychiatrist sees him examining the dresses in her closet and posing in front of the mirror, holding up the dresses in front of him, trying on different women's hats.
When seeing snippets of scenes from both this and GONE WITH THE WIND side by side on a split screen, even some trivial scenes (like that of both Scarlett and Julie primping up their faces in front of a mirror) wind up looking cloned.
Like many screen adaptations of Christie novels, THE
MIRROR
CRACK'D features an all-star cast--and in this case the casting would seem inspired: Angela Lansbury as Miss Marple, Rock Hudson as a film producer, Elizabeth Taylor as his movie-star wife, Kim Novack as a rival screen queen, and Tony Curtis as Novak's lover and the producer of the film they are all making.
It's a subconscious spectacle, a view of humanity through a fun house
mirror
in an alternate universe.
Ray Harryhausen's extraordinary stop-motion animation creatures include a chess-playing baboon (the sequence where the baboon reacts to its reflection in a
mirror
with startled grief is truly remarkable), a trio of skeletal sword-wielding humanoid insect demons, a powerful bronze colossus called the Minoton, a savage gigantic walrus, a helpful horned club-brandishing troglodyte, and a ferocious saber-toothed tiger.
They decide to research the modern day myth of 'Candyman', a figure who appears complete with a hooked hand to savage whomever stupid enough to say his name five times in front of the
mirror.
The sequence where Bruce Lee's face is pasted over the
mirror
(As others have mentioned) is truly as shoddy as it gets and overall the movie has a few alright action sequences in the beginning but it's all very sub-par stuff.
Candyman stays alive in the legend that says that he would appear if his name is spoken five times in front of the mirror, and the skeptical Helen summons Candyman.
A completely different viewing experience from what the ordinary filmic audience is used to.The acting was superb from the main character and my only quarm with the entire production is the last few seconds could have been a little more in the same vein and less showy (not in an f/x sense but more in a well,was it him or was it the
mirror?
It's not a new theme but it's reworking works, albeit keeping us a bit at arm's length from the subjects, perhaps (wittingly?) to
mirror
the arm's length from the fullness of engagement in life that is the nature of existence for her characters until varying quiet epiphanies open their paths to new alternative ways of perceiving.
I think people trash this show because it really does make them look at themselves in the
mirror
and ask yourself 'am I really happy with the choices I've made?'
The art of satire is to
mirror
life while leaving an artist's touch (of opinion); however, if this is dir.
In essence the movie has scene after scene that does nothing but emphasize and embellish hate over and over....someone gets out of line...BANG...someone spits the wrong way.....BANG.....someone talks out of line....BANG...then the end of the movie comes and guess what???? BANG, BANG, BANG, BANG...a bar room shoot 'em up that looks like it was filmed one time without editing..... Some of the saving graces of the film are some of the scenery where the movie was shot, details to the guns for the era, costumes that appear to
mirror
the times and Ric Dark's performance as Owen...the reckless gun for hire that looks like a cross between Ulysess S .
To witness the final stages of Brundlefly is particularly disturbing and Geena Davis' reactions
mirror
exactly how I felt when watching with disbelief.
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