Press
in sentence
1835 examples of Press in a sentence
It's a bit unnerving when a studio declines to screen a film for the
press
before it goes into wide release.
In fact, when you try to
press
the peg into the hole for which it is obviously designed, it crumbles into sticky, disgusting pieces that smell like rotting fruit and won't wash off.
I was very willing to give Rendition the benefit of the doubt when it came to all the negative
press
I had read concerning it.
Ireland made quite a few waves in the
press
when she dropped her then-husband David McCallum in 1967, beginning her long relationship with Charles Bronson.
These movies always depict the
press
as a bunch of animals and have the parents coming out of court to feed the
press'
hunger to humiliate the grief-stricken.
Roberts was on a career high when this was made, getting lots of
press
and many opportunities.
She does this by leaking company confidential information to the press... Do you believe this?
Amitabh and Jiah Khan, raised great expectations, by their
press
conferences, though it was quite easy for the critics, and the fans too, that after all, this much hyped, Ram Gopal Verma Factory product, is going to fall flat on it's face, in all the probabilities !
they themselves didn't know, what the hell they were talking about, to the press, keeping up with the tag line, that some love stories are not to be understood, or some such rubbish !
(The Hong Kong press, out of respect for her, has mostly refused to report on the incident, but google will turn up a few articles about it.)
Another 2-parter ('The Chinese Web') cobbled together, this one suffers from too much padding, not to mention weak Spidey action taking place in such uninspired locations as a car park, apartment and printing
press.
I assume people who were in this movie must've come to this site to give it some good
press
because this was one of the worst movies I have ever seen.
If they don't
press
it, nothing will happen and the offer will move on to someone else.
Quite why this "jounalist" and a
press
officer from the Met would ever work together is never explained.
They are completely demoralized and yet they
press
on through sheer inertia.
I'm sure this movie will not have the best rating due to critics that rate it (I sat in the
press
section and most of the older viewers seemed disgusted), but don't let that stop you from enjoying it.
I saw it at a German
press
screening.
This mindset is becoming increasingly dominant in all arenas; even the once-hallowed print medium is being diluted, thanks to the abominable "reader response" theory that pervades our schools and the "tabloid brigade" that lines our magazine racks whose mentality appears to be infiltrating the once-venerable mainstream
press.
I hadn't heard of this film, so I guess it didn't get much press, which is kind of a shame.
They get the job done in their own way without anything being leaked to the press, and this gives them a freedom to expand their means of getting to the criminals most working detectives and policeman just can not nab.
Greta Garbo even mentioned to the
press
that the German film was her favorite where she had to make the change from Silent films to sound.
Later on that day a spooky gentleman shows up and tells them that they have the choice to
press
the button and receive a million dollars but someone they don't know will die.
Nicolas Roeg's "Don't Look Now" gets a lot of bad
press
because it is sold as a horror film.
Oh, and another thing, whatever you do, don't compare it to the original because, to reiterate what F. Gary Gray has told the
press
a million times, THIS IS NOT A REMAKE!! My advice- if you're interested in nit-picking your way through a good-humored, fun flick, don't even bother seeing The Italian Job.
At the first glance of this film the camera angles immediately make you think that this is a low budget film that will bore you to tears or make you
press
the stop button.
Well trying to think of what can possibly happen next after they finally didn't
press
the button.
I am just glad they didn't
press
the button finally, but what happens to the people in the hatch?
I saw 'I Smell the Dead' -- sorry, 'I SELL the Dead' -- at a
press
screening.
When the opening credits rolled, there were -- as usual at
press
screenings -- loud ovations for the names of every actor or crew member who'd got friends in the audience, and silence for those who hadn't.
Its lead character borrows traits from a various assortment of genuine actors, involving himself in many illegal affairs that have been dabbled in by celebrities in Hollywood, and all-too-often exploited by the
press.
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