Monster
in sentence
1126 examples of Monster in a sentence
Anyway, the basic premise of this movie is fairly simply: an American space rocket crash-lands somewhere in the middle of the African jungle and causes a plain ordinary wasp to mutate into a gigantic buzzing
monster.
Basically it involves a bunch of idiots at a summer camp (in November!) unwittingly bringing to life a
monster
who likes axing his victims...or something like that.
If you can stand some blood and some guy in a sea
monster
suit pretending to hump a lifeless naked female for a second, then this is your film.
This movie is so incredibly bad, it stands out on its own, it can't be categorized even into the sub-zero "Z" grade of Japanese
monster
flicks.
The battle with the titular
monster
was done by the double exposure of the hero and a large Manta Ray, you can plainly see the waves of "two" oceans superimposed on each other as well as the hero, Jose.
Godzilla, it's a new
monster.
Late, great eccentric character actor Fox Harris (the brain-fried lobotomized scientist who drives the car with the radioactive alien corpses in the trunk in the fantastic sci-fi cult black comedy blast "Repo Man") has a scenery-gulping hammy field day as a twitchy flipped-out physician whose cancerous liver is fed to the
monster
at the picture's incredible conclusion (the grody thing literally pukes its guts out after eating the lethal organ!).
The nasty, hulking, wisecracking werewolf makes for a ferocious and frightening monster: the savage beast rips off heads, tears people to pieces, rapes women, and even brutally castrates one poor guy (ouch!).
"Godzilla" was supposed to be the
monster
hit of 1998, overwhelming audiences with its hype and special effects.
In the sequel to the cult horror hit "Ginger Snaps", Brigitte(Emily Perkins) finds herself transforming into the same
monster
that killed her sister.
The movie viewers were intoduced to the
monster
during a sequence where a poor copy of a Cobra Gun Ship helicopter, attacked a military convoy carrying the
monster
in a 55 gallon drum.
The monster, to me, looked like a combination of BeetleJuice and the
Monster
from SPECIES.
So far, all attempts to make the extinct Megalodon into the next big
monster
(a la T-Rex from "Jurassic Park" or Bruce from "Jaws") have failed miserably.
"The Fly," like "The Phantom of the Opera" and "The Hunchback of Notre Dame," shows us a
monster
who is reduced to a grotesque (and in the case of Brundle, inhuman) appearance, while still endowed with the bare instincts of love, morality, and fear; under increasingly heavy makeup, Goldblum retains his trademark sardonic wit, but it connects with a plaintive sorrow that is truly affecting.
The delectable Dina Meyer and the normally competent Lochlyn Munro co-star in this turkey made for The Sci-Fi Channel, about archaeologists unleashing an unkillable
monster
from an Egyptian tomb.
The movie goes nowhere once the
monster
is unleashed, which happens about five minutes in.
Killer Ticks aren't the most ridiculous menace ever created in one of these movies as anyone has seen Night of the Lepus (killer bunny rabbits) or various 50's B-movies will attest but they certainly aren't convincingly threatening enough to be the
monster
in any movie.
But the worst part was the
monster.
So imagine my surprise when the
monster
was shown as a giant "love pump".
This movie steals pretty much everything from the alien movies, the look of the
monster
is also very similar to the
monster
in Alien.
They took that story and made some
monster
flick about how one dude (Tom Hardy from Layer Cake) found out his girlfriend was still alive in the maze and he set out to save her and the village.
The rest of the players (including Ed Begley, Lloyd Bochner, and Talia Coppola/Shire) try very hard to make sense of this thing, which has a distinctive (if low-rent) look but never comes up with anything exciting except for a hidden
monster
in the manor.
Nothing to complex, but it does go a little beyond generic yar boo hiss the evil
monster
territory and George Eastman conveys it brilliantly.
On a weekend hunting trip two firefighters Alex Kerwood and Wayne Higley stumble onto a mysterious burial site.They dig it up and find the skull of an ancient horned creature.Big mistake!Suddenly the unleashed
monster
starts killing people in a small American town...OK,I'm a pretty tolerant guy when it comes to low-budget indie horror,but "In the Woods" is bad to the bone.The script is lifeless and dull,the suspense is non-existent and the action takes place in the woods for only 10 minutes or so.The DVD proudly claims "Creepier than 'The Blair Witch Project'".Yeah,right!Avoid this piece of cow dung like the plague unless you want to be bored beyond comprehension.
The
monster
suit is awesome and frightening, and a different look that almost smacks of a Toy Franchise, Hey if Full Moon and Todd McFarlane can make action figures for any character..Why not The Beast from Bray Road Wolfette,Shapeshifter with medallion accessory,or the Rhett Giles everyman hero with removable appendages.
Well, having sat through countless low-budget
monster
flicks in my time, Gary Jones' SPIDERS is like a breath of fresh air.
Okay, it's all very predictable, with the old conspiracy style "government creates some kind of horrible hybrid
monster
via experiment that goes wrong" storyline being utilised in the same old way countless movies have before.
The film is about some stupid
monster
that lurks within a toxic disposal dump, tearing off the heads of its victims.
Then we are introduced to the horrible
monster
tadpole thing, Hedorah, which was named s hastily as the graboids in Tremors.
Then some more crazy stuff happens and there is some singing and an annoying kid and the dookie
monster
dies, somehow.
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