Moral
in sentence
2544 examples of Moral in a sentence
And it's always a treat to see Charles Winninger in another one of his kindly elderly paternal roles, here as Stanwyck's
moral
superior.
I admire Night of the Living Dead for its innovative approaches, but I have always found the zombies to be very boring because in
moral
and intellectual terms they are complete ciphers.
Kind of like the zombie "hero" in Jean Rollin's Zombie Lake who has some kind of
moral
sense despite his deadness.
"Niggling" questions about the appropriateness of the film itself, the topic of child prostitution, the use of young actresses and actors, the film's
moral
detachment, whether is should have been made or could be made again all flitted through my mind as I soaked in the beauty of the images.
What started as a love story between teacher and student turns suddenly and painfully towards a stay-in-school
moral.
A pretty nice movie, not one of these typical "gangster and rap movie", it is actually quiet moving, and has an interesting
moral
in it.
The
moral
of the story, and the main plot point between the two main leads, playing Adam & Eve - told very well, and acted out well.
Anyone trying to find a
moral
will be shot."
I'm still not very sure where the
moral
center of the movie was located, but I think that was Malle's point-- that it's a good idea to question and re-evaluate all taboo subjects to understand why they are taboo in the first place.
Through many episodes with some linking points since 1808 in Toledo (Spain) to the present days in France, Bunuel presents a delicious surrealistic satire to the
moral
and costumes of the hypocrite society, to the family values and to the church.
I have watched Desperate Housewives and sometimes they have shows that have a good
moral
to it and sometimes are funny.
dale arderns relationship with her fiancé was almost non-existent and her desire to chase flash around showed a lack of
moral
character.
This film tries and fails to be a compelling account of the experiences of Indians growing up in the U.S. The perspective espoused here matches up nicely with the the view that many Indians hold of ABCDs: that all of them have forgotten their heritage and culture, that all the women are promiscuous, the men are conflicted yet also promiscuous, that all ABCDs hate their parents with a passion and seek to flout their
moral
standards at every opportunity, and that the women can be redeemed (temporarily at least)by having sex with a ridiculous, platitude-spouting FOB.
this movie had absolutely no plot, fun, entertainment, point, theme, message moral, or anything else that you would watch a movie for.
So, the
moral
of the story is that you transition from being a boy into being a man by moving into your "baby's mamma"s dilapidated apartment and sell stolen clothes on the streets, while probably still cheating on her.
"Hey Mr Spock, how about some liberty call on board that planet that loves to please?" Mr Spock answers, "The Federation is not paying you to enjoy yourself so get back to work!" Anyway, this episode is really lame in that it has no
moral
message like "Let This Be Your Last Battlefield", it's just a lady with superpowers and limited dialog screwing with the Enterprise, and despite Scottie's and Spock's very cool moment this episode sucks cheese whiz.
Due to a few comic lines a few nice songs and a good
moral.
Kim Ki Duk's Bad Guy is a brilliant study of vanity, sexual obsession and
moral.
It was ..mmmm... well made period drama WITH NO SKIN!!! Now the depiction of love and longing and the
moral
struggle was nicely (albeit slowly) depicted, lack of sex on screen made it very...lame.
The quick answer is sexploitation, of course, but then why not just pile on the sex, instead of complicating it with (a) a noir cliche like the crusading public servant falling into
moral
dissolution, (b) the enigmatic Christoid character from another plane of reality, whose name, Sam Silver, is a takeoff on the director's name?
The whole cast did a wonderful job.....my daughter was so inspired by the
moral
of the story.
Fields is excellent and the film has a very good
moral!
The
moral
of the film is everyone has their price - even the lowly janitor played by John Qualen.
After having seen it a number of times-- first in the mid 1980's after if was released to negative reviews and poor box office receipts--most recently last week-- I think that THE MEAN SEASON is an under-appreciated, tightly crafted suspense thriller that, in spite of what other reviews have stated, does NOT pander to cliché's--this film is old enough to have helped establish those very same tropes that have since become clichés; remember, this was made before Manhunter, Silence of the Lambs, 15 Minutes, etc etc...and was one of the first films to deal with the whole notion of fame/celebrity/serial killers and the lack of ethics displayed by journalists, who must rank somewhere below pimps and pickpockets in terms of
moral
turpitude.
I'm not saying everything on TV has to have a
moral
center or be totally educational, but good lord, do we really have to sink this low?
She may be dead but at least she got the
moral
high-ground.
The
moral
is that everything has a weakness if you look closely enough.
The story (the usual crime does not pay
moral
with some twists) is a good one, strong on character and deserved its Oscar nomination.
The point was to make a
moral
point, not to be narratively convincing.
The only one thing good I can say about this movie is it has a GREAT
moral.
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