Presumably
in sentence
490 examples of Presumably in a sentence
This theory was
presumably
not intended to apply to, say, "Kind Hearts and Coronets" (which is, if anything, a satire on the Edwardian upper classes) or to "The Ladykillers" or "The Lavender Hill Mob", both of which may contain some satire but are not political in nature.
Fawcett plays the wayward black sheep daughter come home only to find that she missed the last days of her mom's life as well as the funeral, much to the chagrin of her more stable and
presumably
more sensible sister.
Ricky plans to sell their late parents' house and move inland to the Castro Valley, a more middle-class and
presumably
safer environment.
Uneducated people of simple faith behave differently from us
(presumably
brilliant) modern folks, and the scene isn't so much unbelievable (I buy it, but I know the Irish) as embarrassing.
This starts where other femme fatale films leave off, so the vaguely logical (but interesting) whodunit is embellished with a display of Wellesian scenes (typical rapid-fire style), dialog (lots of "hard-boiled" philosophy), and unusual acting (good Hayworth
presumably
intentionally one-dimensional).
Dragon does have the same master though -
presumably
all the other students have moved on to other things.
It begins with a vast factory complex crammed with people making a great variety of little things, parts of high-tech equipment presumably; it isn't really made very clear.
Billed as Takashi Miike's "first family film" - by people who haven't seen Zebraman,
presumably.
Patrick was an obscure (and rather boring) Australian thriller released in 1978 and I doubt even the makers of it would have planned a sequel; but for some reason Giallo a Venezia director Mario Landi saw fit to direct a (presumably) unofficial sequel to it anyway.
Presumably, one or two of these overgrown schoolboys playing buffoons were popular in themselves.
Frank, the "regular fellow," does get his comeuppance, but by his own hand, leaving John
presumably
to be a ward of the state again.
There's no conceivable reason to hate your audience here, since
presumably
they'll be pretty close to the same audience that watches Reno 911.
They're impervious to bullets and can destroy airplanes,
presumably
with the same rays.
It is 1) unrealistic that Irene Dunn, missing at sea for seven years, should reappear on the very day that husband, Cary Grant, has succeeded in having her declared dead and then, moments later, remarried in the same courtroom and 2) that Grant's mother would not have attended the wedding;
presumably
the writers needed Dunne's mother-in-law to be in when Dunne (who naturally would not have known about the new wedding so would have no reason to attend and try to stop it) resurfaced though a little thought could have solved this.
They
presumably
intended to make their very own imitation of Wes Craven's "Last House on the Left" with aggressive sex scenes and violent revenge-action, only they only got around filming the sex footage and completely forgot about the action.
The journey his character (and
presumably
the actual archbishop Romero) makes from innocence to awareness is deeply moving and very convincing.
The skits could be anything from a parody of a movie or TV show, a fake commercial, or just random events
(presumably
TV shows as the robot chicken is being forced to view a multitude of TV screens at the opening of every episode).
The movie consists largely of Dorf and others tooling around Budapest, with several time outs so that Dorf can reassure Hoskins, who never leaves his study
presumably
because of his great girth, that he is not wearing a wire.
The trains have little to do with the (confused and disjointed) plot of the film, they give what can best be described as extended cameo appearances, which
presumably
are meant to prop up the wooded acting performances (of all but Didi Conn).
For a cynical Westerner like me it's all too easy to believe in the political/governmental corruption that obtains in countries like Cambodia and Tavernier does little to disabuse me, telling it, presumably, like it is.
The characters run around like idiots for awhile, and the movie ends with a great, disappointing cop-out,
presumably
because the filmmakers couldn't figure out a better way to end it.
As Sonny is leaving, the viewer sees the wife's hand grip her husbands,
presumably
showing God's work in the situation; Sonny's reply: "Momma, we made news in heaven today."
Her husband, Monk (a name
presumably
chosen as an ironic joke), is violent, abusive and unfaithful; he is unemployed, but still manages to find enough money to drink and gamble.
There is
presumably
a crowd of people who find this lowbrow fodder food for thought.
Presumably
the budget didn't stretch to a microphone, as the entire thing seems to be dubbed over, making everyone's voice exactly the same volume, despite their location on screen.
Funny that the ants attack a guy on a helicopter and yet the two dorks who are on foot somehow get ignored while they are sticking their hands into ant larvae (looks like rice-pudding) and kicking over the logs which are
presumably
the center of the community.
Ditto Michael Madsen - there's actually a scene where the two sit quietly facing each other,
presumably
lost in thought over why they're still paying their agents.
When the first season of oz finished airing, we had many characters who we grew to care for (or hate)
presumably
dead.
This was
presumably
a follow-up to "White Heat" and was not as popular--again, because it is dour and violent, or perhaps for the general audience of 1950, this type of gangster film had seen its day.
Average looking woman goes to a Lodge with below-average looking boyfriend,
presumably
to have sex.
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