Native
in sentence
769 examples of Native in a sentence
This is an amazing movie about a father dedicated to finding his son who has been abducted by
native
Americans in south America.
In 1963, Hector Perez was already a promising young singer in his
native
Puerto Rico when, at the age of seventeen, he moved to New York City to try and make a name for himself as a performer there.
The film is almost worth it for one scene: A dead woman is to be made a zombie; the ritual goes like this: a dwarf in sunglasses and love-beads, top-hat and tux (over a tie-dye tee-shirt) whips the back of a
native
girl kneeling before him.
The lead actress Antonia is extremely beautiful (She looks a bit like Nicole Kidman and a bit like Naiomi Watts) and does very well as Catherine, her emotions come out pretty well considering she is not a
native
Indian and not that familiar with the Indian sensibilities.
The original films could not have much better though because a couple of these actors - okay, most of these actors are just downright awful from the lead Barry Norton to the excessiveness of Jack Del Rio looking like a psychopath at the ship's steering wheel to the laughable persona of Jack Barty as the captain to the even more ludicrous
native
chief with a New York accent.
The South African
native
is serviceable enough as Blood, but he lacks the charisma that Errol Flynn brought to the role in the 1935 Warner Brothers picture "Captain Blood."
Yet another grandiose insult to the
Native
American people.
The racism inflicted upon the
Native
American character was heavy handed and unconvincing.
An elderly man Moma (portrayed with great range and nuance by Ismail Ghaffari), a celebrity singer in his
native
Iraqi Kurdistan, sets out by bus from Iran with an entourage of his musician sons to his homeland to perform in a large public concert.
The Aussie trying to talk like an Alabama
native
was, quite possibly, the dumbest idea in cinema history.
They basically took the final scenes of the original White Fang's elements (White Fang is a hero of a friend) and turned into a whole movie, mixed with
Native
American beliefs and a sloppy love story.
One that is accustomed to listening to
Native
American dialects might find that the softness, quietness and blending of the sounds is characteristic of this
native
language.
It makes me sigh to think of the beautiful
native
civilization, where people live in harmony with nature.
The
native
scenes are gorgeous, both in the scenery and in the relationships portrayed.
Brutally honest, sympathetic insight into the fall of the many
Native
American peoples... some of the material is painful, sometimes bleak, but an absolute MUST SEE for any feeling person with even a passing interest in the history of America.
The movie Isn't very serious or artsy which makes the point of people having trouble worldwide with being forced to learn English that much easier to witness for those of us who grew up in a place where English is the
native
language.
Instead, I see on the show when the idiot asks for more hot sauce in Mexico there was no please and no thank you, just an assumption and very little effort put in to speak the
native
language.
Interviewees spoke in their
native
tongue, no translations were given.
First of all, I commend the writer and filmmaker for having a
Native
American as one of the main characters.
This often startling account of a progressively S&M tinged love affair (and, yes, that is the right word for it) between an 18 year old schoolgirl and a married man twice her age remains currently banned in its
native
South Korea where it's considered pornographic.
A superb miniseries with messages that appeal, hopefully, to all persons who watch it--not just the
Native
American population.
But, if you're a
native
Chicagoan, rent this movie...just to see the sights.
The so called
native
people shift from white to Asian to black randomly from scene to scene.
This is a moving fable, dealing with the issues of the 'loss of the wild', the crushing of
Native
American culture by the unspeakable brutalities of white settlers, the betrayals of trust which deprived the Indians of their habitats, and the continuing psychological perversion of bitter people who want to stop the innocent enjoyment of life by shattering the dreams and the enforcement of degradation upon those too weak to protect themselves.
There's also a hysterically stupid monster that pops up every once in a while to rape and kill the
native
girls.
The Romans had left Britannia, and the
native
Britons were dealing with an invasion of Angles and Saxons from mainland Europe.
It also shows some current problems today with the
native
American culture.
I would recommend this movie to anyone who is interested in learning more about the
native
American culture and about oral history.
Following the resurrection of a dead
native
girl, a french police officer from the mainland arrives to the island and takes an immediate disliking as to the place's condition.
Boris Karloff, in nearly his last film, plays a plantation owner who is experimenting with telekinetic manipulation and is involved in a skinny white guy and his midget friend's enslaving of
native
girls, via voodoo... I'm getting bored just thinking about this movie.
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