Mostly
in sentence
3026 examples of Mostly in a sentence
This documentary
mostly
only sketches the Islamic civilization and it does a very good job with that considering the existence of those ignorant people asking "Do Muslim's believe in God?".
First, he gets to get past a bureaucratic police chief(Allen Garfield) who is
mostly
all talk, and no action.
This entire movie is
mostly
flash backs from the first movie.
The young boys are
mostly
all wonderful: Alfred Lutter, from "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore", as the nerdy brain; Jackie Earle Haley as the cool kid with shades and motorcycle; Brandon Cruz, from "The Courtship of Eddie's Father", as the pitcher for the enemy-team.
The jokes are juvenile, stupid and utterly predictable;
mostly
sex oriented,
mostly
homophobic and anti feminist oriented.
This one has all the Sandler trademarks: a daft plot, a pervading sense of (mostly) innocent fun, incredibly funny supporting cast, plenty of cameos, cartoon-like laws of physics, references to his other films (or is that vice-versa in this case?).
It's
mostly
just the same story: kids witness something from outer space, aren't believed, and solve the mystery themselves.
In general, the film translates well to tape--the biggest loss are car scenes where two-shots become alternating one-shots, and the squabble outside the diner, a three shot in the theater (inscrutable dude leaning against store shutters), now
mostly
a two-shot, which really removes a lot of the dry wit.
It's pretty good and Colin Gray O'Hara is totally hot! (?Spoiler?): the violence in one scene (culminating in the bathroom): we see it all second hand on video
(mostly
hear it), was pretty extreme by my standards.
I have been trying to figure out if it was an act of Lane's-- namely getting a "better offer" in a Broadway show (his IMDb biography shows he did
mostly
children's films those years) or the fickle finger of network fate that did this show in.
It doesn't take an idiot to realize the major problem with debt and credit cards in America falls
mostly
on the people themselves who run it up.
Depressing autumn movie, but with a glimpse of hope and great music of
mostly
Spanish origin.
Quite a few were made,
mostly
comedies, but also two musicals - the Technicolored "Fiesta" with fiery Armida and this film that boasted of Frances Langford, one of the top popular singers of the day.
I think both of these actors pulled some stunts during the academy awards and they were the forerunners of todays
mostly
leftist Hollywood actor crowd, and this movie has a clear political bent to appeal to that audience with dialog like the old people and trash cans.
Apparently the screenwriters unwisely chose to base this one on a small section of dialog that was spoken between characters in the first film which most people --myself included-- didn't even bother to pay any real attention to at the time due
mostly
to the simple facts that it was just plain trivial, and not exactly pertinent to the plot.
A craptacular knock-off off Bill & Ted (a master-piece in comedy, in comparison), which honestly is
mostly
funny because it was made quite some time ago and was sort of creative.
The series is supposedly set in Boston, but is about as authentically Bostonian as a Philly cheese steak (I think it's
mostly
filmed in Toronto - it's DEFINITELY not filmed in Boston).
The writing is very weak, consisting
mostly
of f-bombs, homophobic taunting, and screaming.
Performances were
mostly
grating, perhaps with the exception of Quiyi.
At the time I was blown away by this film because it had every thing in it any city kid would want to be able to do, which
mostly
was race horses and have a pretty girl interested in the same thing as a friend.
I saw this film on the closing night of Sundance,
mostly
because all the other films I wanted to see were sold out.
It's
mostly
the disjointed feel of the scenes, the amateurish editing and the poor pacing.
they would have realized that the the murders were all in his head!!!!!!!!!!!! he was an "American" psycho...a fraud...a tacky, tacky fraud, as most people were in the 80's...as being the purpose of this book...to comment on the American condition during that time(and in my opinion it is still
mostly
apt) thus negating the premise of this entire movie...unless your an idiot and completely missed the point of either the book or the movie...then the movie will still suck!!!!!!!!!!!! i still can't believe when business in America count on American stupidity...they win...because it's true...how could anybody misinterpret such a concise ending...how exactly do you feed a kitten to an atm anyway...arrrrgghhhh.
There have so many of these "growing up brown in America" movies in the last decade,
mostly
low budget flicks that don't get a whole lot of press.
Some of the supporting cast could have been played by better actors, but they are serviceable and are
mostly
meant to occasionally prod the story along another notch.
But mostly, the whole movie is an excuse for him to be silly.
Mostly
silly, with Adam Sandler doing his usual goofy stuff, but Jack Nicholson - looking like Orson Welles - gives the movie exactly what it needs.
Wonderful scenes, at times very funny (but
mostly
smiling-funny, no slapping-laughing-out-loud-funny).
Better yet, the actors portraying them are
mostly
brilliant.
My experience with movies from Thailand have
mostly
been in the form of Tony Jaa and several movies by Pen-Ek Ratanaruang (Last Life in the Universe, 6ixtynin9, and Transistor Love Story).
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