Perceived
in sentence
1358 examples of Perceived in a sentence
The lead pair are excellent and it is shameful that they took so much flak for the film's
perceived
failure.
Partially from the
perceived
need, one feels, to include a conventional love story in the plot to make the film more marketable to a 1950's movie-going public.
It doesn't need saying that Sergei Eisenstein was one of cinema's most significant innovators, and his mastering of the montage was forever to alter how films were made and
perceived
by audiences.
Watching him you never know when the next head will fall, or if he's suddenly touched with sentiment and decides to spare some
perceived
slighter.
This is a collection of warm, human and often humorous Booth Tarkington stories, strung together, of a
perceived
or recalled pre-WWI America.
I saw the movie in class and I have to right a paper on how I
perceived
it.
Adapted by Donald Margulies from his own Pulitzer Prize-winning play, the film documents the unraveling relationships among two married couples who have been best friends for twelve years - Gabe and Karen, a
perceived
model of professional success (as renowned food writers) and domestic stability; and the other, Tom and Beth, in a state of irreparable collapse.
History, having no clear beginning and no clear end, is almost impossible to squeeze into the conventional story structures demanded of cinema-going audiences - at least as they are
perceived
by film financiers.
For all its
perceived
depth noted in other comments here (and in the pages of Film Comment magazine), this experimental Thai film left me unmoved and even a bit irritated.
The songs that were written about the wars are a really good reflection on how the war was
perceived.
I think that in this day and age it is very sad that for whatever reason women are still being
perceived
in such light on screen.
His impersonations remains vividly embedded in my brain because besides the look and mannerisms, I
perceived
the soul of the characters in question.
It's to show how personal this music, and how this 'way of life' can be for a person, and how it affects personality but not necessarily in the
perceived
negative light.
The really sad thing about this film (although all intentions was good but so naive) was that the girl of course was
perceived
as "hanging" out with a rich white guy who paid for her services, as girls do in the red light zone.
This guy Selleck was too good looking in an old Hollywood way (Clark Gable), his voice seemed an octave too high for a man of his size and looks, so damn many women were positively orgasmic when they talked about him and women are notorious for going after some really shallow males, and the few times I caught a scene or two flipping through channels, he seemed smug, or at least that's how I
perceived
him.
This movie's underlying message, if universalized, is "anyone who is
perceived
as bad should be killed in the name of God"; seems to be the same logic that any terrorist would use.
His style eschews mainstream conventions, resulting in his films being
perceived
as nearly the antithesis of Hollywood's films, with which most people are familiar.
All of the characters in this film have an imperviousness to the objections related to a
perceived
totalitarianism brought on in the sixties, not just because the radical aspect of the decade has yet to be, but also, because locking horns with the authority figures is not second nature to them ...(Even Big John Milner)...
The remaining interest in this film lies in the historical/cultural themes: The war (referenced only in regard to minor plot points - the characters seem scarcely affected except that they're scolded for leaving their lights on after curfew), and the role of astrology in American society (it seems to be have been
perceived
as a way for idle, reasonably well-off women to be parted from their money).
My five year old did not enjoy this movie because Pooh and friends spend most of the movie scared and in
perceived
peril.
It boils down to this: Money, power, and (perceived) respect.
I have just watched back to back these two movies and ranked both an 8. Kevin Costner, Dennis Quaid, Gene Hackman Etal made me feel that their movie was closer to history and also brought pride in their
perceived
honor.
Cinderella, often
perceived
as weak because of her 50's heritage, becomes more pro-active and almost an action-hero in the film's closing moments.
Like MASH, South Park contrasts the
perceived
obscenity of language and sexuality with the true obscenity of war and violence.
Starting Peter Weir's central theme of "closed" or alienated sections of society ( see later "Witness","Mosquito Coast", "Dead Poets Society", "The Truman Show"), the Parisiens resorting to darkly humourous lengths in protecting their
perceived
ideal pioneer township is handled in typical Weir dreamlike fashion.
It interests me that some people see this as a propaganda piece and also as a statement of the
perceived
supremacy of the "white man's religion".
The mobs existed, not to right some
perceived
wrong, but were the people's justifications for their lives at that moment.
And Derek Jacobi as Claudius is all false idiocy, which looks harder to pull off than what everyone is doing today- that simmering "mystique" which is as empty and false as the way everyone
perceived
Claudius to be.
For those who don't know, "cinema de qualite" was a phrase coined by one of the New Wave critics (I think it was Truffaut, but don't quote me) to express contempt for what he and his colleagues
perceived
to be the overly glossy, empty product typical of 1950s French cinema.
As a thriller, this movie must be one of the most "laid-back" kind of psychological 'who-done- it' criminal survey of the human potential for understanding and/or entropy of the freckled- mind ... Both main actors are just "plainly" superb and truth-worthy... Isabele Care is so natural and Poolvoorde so much "evil"...without "pathos"...The general feel or attitude rendition by the actors is just right to the point, with a naive witness and an faulted main character, whom reveals witness' ambivalent attitude and feelings toward the same
perceived
sick or morally tainted "main" character"...All subtle and slightly perceived, apparently superficiality felt by main "witness" character... Just incredibly well understood and acted by both main characters !
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