Police
in sentence
3345 examples of Police in a sentence
John Launer (in his first movie role) played
police
Capt.
When she arrives, she receives bad news about Lorenzo from the
police.
Several phone calls to the
police
bring the men in blue into the picture, but will they get there in time if the caller materializes?
Bad guys' lawyer is finally testifying against former employers who both die in the most ludicrous final scene in the history of gangster movies: both choose to stand by the wide window panes while
police
is firing from below the street.
Meanwhile, since the
Police
have focused on the wrong person; the killer is walking the streets.
On the other hand, it has a lot of dark comedy in the way it shows how the
police
play into Ann Margret's hands and how political pressure makes the
Police
look for the easiest choice, not necessarily the right choice.
We essentially find ourselves laughing at an unemployed homeless man who needs to make an ass out of himself in order to escape the
police
-- which is nothing worth laughing at, when you really think about it.
Upon reaching a park, Kishenlal leaves his sons there and drives away to divert his enemies and the
police
from his path.
Notwithstanding the fact they quietly walked away unharmed at the end of the first film, they're now being taken away in ambulances and under massive
police
supervision.
The plot developments are laughable and absurd, the
police
are made to look completely incompetent, the psychic-ability angle is gratuitous and poorly used, and there is virtually no suspense to speak of.
Michael Granger is also excellent as the honest, professional Cuban
police
investigator who stays on the case himself and keeps running into Mitchell along the way.
Starting with the time-honoured
police
thriller format, the way in which the drama plays out couldn't be more different from your average excellent but formulaic episode of "The Closer" or "Without a Trace"; as in much Korean cinema, the presumption of intelligence in the viewer means that far from being walked through every plot point, you tread the lonely road of clues and suspicion by yourself.
Even if you don't put much thrust in the
police
(as they claim in the movie) you still can act on your own, and I am talking here about him as a protector of his daughter and as a protector of his own skin - for God's sake, that kid RAPED HIS DAUGHTER , BROKE HIS HEAD AND SET HIM ON FIRE TO DIE !!!
They decide to flee to Switzerland, which is not easy, since they have both the Military
Police
and the Germans against them... Basically, the five unite all the characteristics that the twelve members of the "Dirty Dozen" had.
We then get a story moving into total fantasy as the bones and skull of what looked like a rhinoceros come to life and start leaving parts of bodies all over the town.Naturally the
police
don't believe the theory that the remains of the bodies have been killed by a creature who chewed them to death!.
What's worse, the entire British
police
force and its detectives and psychologists can't figure the mystery out, and are deceived by a half-crazed teen who hasn't eaten or drank much for a fortnight!
The efforts of
police
and government against him are portrayed as "factually" as possible (which makes aspects of their discussions rather unintelligible to Americans).
Edited & directed by Byron Mabe who also has an uncredited cameo as a
police
officer, She Freak is pure rubbish from beginning to end.
But when that "spirit" takes human form and joins the local
police
force, really it's too much!
Kyle (Jack Wagner) is a
police
officer who doesn't seem to have any partner but his crime-fighting dog, Hunter.
He can't get a job; is consistently, racially harassed by the
police
and goes back to an area which he tried to escape from by joining the army in the first place, hoping that on his return there would be some improvements.
The novel turns out to be an exact description of five genuine murders, right down to details that only the
police
and the killer himself could have known.
Lloyd Bridges, cast as
police
sergeant Ed Stagg, has discovered that the husband (Frank Converse) of his daughter Tina (Sallie Shockley) is dallying with a local chippy and during Stagg's attempts to end the adultery, he accidentally commits a murder, upon which he forges a plan to place responsibility for the crime upon a local inebriate, tangentially providing a question of the title: was Scott's "What a tangled web we weave..." (Marmion) the intended source, inaptly transposed into "tattered"?
In what may be his finest performance yet, underrated actor Tommy Lee Jones plays an old, grizzled and retired military
police
sergeant who receives word his youngest son (Jonathon Tucker - Hostage, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre) is missing after being back in the states from fighting in Iraq just two days ago.
With the help of a smarty young female
police
detective (Charlize Theron), Jones starts unraveling the truth behind his son's death.
With some suspicion pointing to the strange doorman, Dinardo recruits
police
rookie Kate as bait to lure the killer into the open.
During a botched drug store robbery and subsequent shoot out with the police, NIkita is the only survivor.
The
police
at the end, though only expressing concern for a young boy sleeping on a park bench alone seem like the bad guys.
Convinced that the
police
will not believe his account of the incident, he refuses to turn himself in.
His girlfriend has other ideas and wants him to go to the
police
(her social status is higher than his).
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