Playboy
in sentence
83 examples of Playboy in a sentence
This film deserves a 10 for its brilliant portrayal of the world as experienced in the mind of a
playboy.
Tim Meadows so convincingly portrays Leon Phelps, and the story so drew me into the reckless world of Leon, that I momentarily forgot that I was watching a parody of the
playboy
world and felt compelled to rebel against it.
I loved it not only for its fascinating insights into the deluded mind of the playboy, not only for its amusing portrayal of the idiocy of the human sex drive, but also for its courage to fearlessly explore what is in the shadows of heterosexuality.
We meet Brad: a good-looking, wall-street
playboy
with a quick-wit and sharp tongue; Zeek: a cynical, sensitive writer; Jonathan: a sexually perplexed nice guy with an affinity for hand creams and masturbation; and Eric: the married guy, who cherishes his weekly encounters with his single friends in hope for some enlightenment to his boring and banal married existence.
As the story progresses, Lily meets up with man after man and eventually finds a guy who has everything and is a
playboy
bank president It is great to see a very young John Wayne, (Jimmy McCoy Jr.) who was only 25 when this picture was produced and Jimmy did not even get to first base with Lily, not even for lunch.
As a kid we always wanted to rent playboy, but this meant actually calling someone from PPV and asking to rent it.
As drunken millionaire
playboy
Arthur Bach, Dudley Moore is perfect as a grown man trapped in childhood.
The acting in "Written on the Wind" ranges from weak to fair (excepting Robert Stack - he is convincing as the weak & spoiled playboy).
By Leon Phelps" When Tim Meadows created his quintessential SNL playboy, Leon Phelps, I cringed.
On 24 October 1955, the hard-work geologist of the Hadley Oil Company Mitch Wayne (Rock Hudson) meets the executive secretary Lucy Moore (Lauren Bacall) in the office of her boss Bill Ryan in New York and invites her to go to a conference with the alcoholic
playboy
and son of a tycoon Kyle Hadley (Robert Stack).
The plot centers on Arthur Bach, a drunken, diminutive millionaire
playboy
who is at risk of losing his $750 million inheritance if he doesn't marry the dowdy and boring Susan Johnson, an heiress handpicked by his old-money father and dotty grandmother.
He plays an American
playboy
millionaire on vacation in Paris.
He is a town
playboy.
Moore received a Best Actor Oscar nomination for his performance as Arthur Bach, a drunken
playboy
who "races cars, plays tennis, fondles women, but he has weekends off and he's his own boss."
This is a good story of a
playboy
type who needs money and inadvertently sells his soul to Satan for a lot of money.
I caught a blurb about the film including mini synopsis to wit: Grandfather dies and leaves challenges, rather than $$$$$ to his errant
playboy
grandson.
SMALL TOWN GIRL was a 1953 musical from the MGM stable about a rich
playboy
(Farley Granger) who gets arrested for driving too fast through a small town and falls for the sheriff's pretty young daughter (Jane Powell).
Instead of the usual somewhat insipid detective series films, her Miss Withers was a smart-aleck and tough lady--not some pampered
playboy
or Chinese detective.
His character seems to veer between a drunken
playboy
and a perfect gentlemen).
Elizabeth Hurley is hopelessly lost in her role, trying to spice the devilish flavour with ridiculously idiotic walk - I had no idea that Dark One hopped around like (not even a Playboy) bunny.
Melodramatic romance about Joan (played by Ann Harding), a woman who strongly believes that marriage is "a business" and decides that a
playboy
of her acquaintance, John Fletcher (William Powell), a man with a "future" (not to mention a well-trained manservant) is the one for her.
She actually falls in love with him, in spite of herself, but he's all
playboy
and doesn't seem to want to give up the bachelor life.
Not many actors could do as well with this selfish
playboy
role as Errol did-so underrated an actor.Ida is always watchable,too.
He starts to follow a rich playboy, played eerily by Richard Bristol.
Rich playboy, Olivier, approaches him.
William Powell is John Fletcher, a committed playboy, and Ann Harding is Joan Colby, who believes marriage is a business.
For those who don't realize it the Lady of the Tropics we're referring to is Hedy Lamarr who falls big time for visiting
playboy
Robert Taylor in Saigon.
Van Heflin has one of his better roles as a callous, arrogant playboy, and Geraldine Brooks is fine as Carol.
It's a gauzy, soft-focus, soft-headed confection about a
playboy
who becomes smitten with an attractive woman while on his way to marry somebody else; she's also otherwise engaged, and their on-again/off-again relationship has the same old-fashioned complications as the other versions of this highly-concocted plot.
A very rich toothpaste heir
playboy
(Baldwin) lets raging testosterone make all of his major decisions, which results in tiresomely predictable but never really fatal results.
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