Moments
in sentence
3140 examples of Moments in a sentence
A lot of films take the escapist approach to deviate its content from real life; in my opinion that is a perfectly legitimate way to make films, and while Singles certainly has its share of over-the-top
moments
(which are highly enjoyable), I found it to resemble life more than most genre films.
This movie has wonderful pacing and several cliffhanger moments, as Harvey's plot several times seems on the point of failure or exposure, but he manages to beat the odds yet again.
Undeniable that the movie delivers also funny moments, mainly when we see these guys pretending every kind of physical and mental distress, in order to avoid the spectre of Vietnam: really amusing.
It had some funny
moments
in it, but they were few, and mainly in the beginning of the movie.
This is a very but very bad copy of "River Wild, The (1994)", the acting is ok but the script and the mistakes in this movie are so much and so clear that at the half way you really start to ask yourself if they doing such stupidity on purpose, i give you some examples of really absurd
moments
of the movie.
While there are a few amusing
moments
in this film, the odd mixture of characters who find themselves awash on an Island in the Pacific really don't have much chemistry.
It had its dark moments, but it got more winces than chuckles, and no laughs at all.
The direction and editing are sometimes stunningly inept, resulting in several great "WTF moments," including my favorite when a character is hanging off the outside door of a moving jeep, for seemingly no reason.
The biggest problem was that despite all the star power and the direction of the great Michael Curtiz, the overall effort is pretty awful and is only saved by a few
moments
here and there (provided mostly by Flynn and Walter Connelly).
There are no
moments
even worth mentioning and there were no characters that were the least bit intriguing.
And there are some funny moments, not intentionally funny though, 'Its in the back of the net already tomazzo!
"Sherman's March" has some outstanding
moments
that capture the difficulties of relationships, but the lengthiness and lack of focus make it difficult to praise.
The only
moments
of charm.
Sure it has a few clichéd set pieces and a few
moments
of wooden acting, but after the first 30 minutes or so it pans out to be a nicely put together movie.
There are moments, like the climactic scene, which pay homage to the old slapstick farces.
Despite some atmospheric moments, some OK special effects and likable performances by Peter O'Toole and Steve Guttenberg (Daryl Hannah is too "soft"; Beverly D'Angelo is disappointing), this film is a fiasco.
The dirty quality of images (in some
moments
bewilderingly amateurish, ins others incredibly sophisticated), the acting, the disjointed plot, the weirdness of some scenes (like the one in the car parking), Gazzara's sublime acting, the wonderful choice of places and times... it all gives you an impression of the States like they really are, not the sanitized image you find in so many Holy-Wood flicks (not all of them, I admit, but about 85%...).
And it worked so well that Keaton never really could (despite some great
moments
in STEAMBOAT BILL JR.) out-do it.
This is one of the more propagandistic things you'll ever see - and within
moments
you can rat out the way the characters, situations will go - if the character/situation is self-pitying, libertine, atheist, self-absorbed, licentious - he/she is loved.
And most of the supporting cast, especially James Earl Jones, provided their own
moments.
This is a movie that requires a lot of concentration, because it's one of those films you have to pay strict attention too, and the plot is seriously awesome, plus one of my favorite
moments
in the film is when Cruise chases his own eyeballs!.
Geared towards an inexorable ending, there are
moments
of real beauty and tenderness.
I'm convinced those
moments
could have been captured with a Super 8.
Though most are vulgar there are
moments
when the vigilantes seem to be coercing men in order to find them guilty and deserving of death.
A warmly funny, enormously likable film, it contains some absolutely hilarious
moments
(watch for his first blind date and the scene where he follows - and overdoes - the advice that Bogart's ghost gave him to tell Diane Keaton how beautiful she is).
When you read the back of the cover and look at the pictures it's obvious that the film is marketed as an action/revenge-film, yet there's only a few exciting
moments
in the entire (and BTW extremely long) 2 hours.
Now, "Song of Norway" shines in its dramatic
moments
much better than its musical
moments
(a bad thing for a musical).
In my book, there're not enough campy
moments
to qualify for Ed Wood territory.
The young couple qualify with some truly sappy
moments
and bad acting, but unfortunately those are overcome by their two elders.
Stoltz and Richardson are quite good (plus the first film's John Getz makes a welcome return in a cameo role), and there are some effective
moments
here and there, but this is a totally pointless sequel, one that doesn't even come close to matching the original.
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