Print
in sentence
690 examples of Print in a sentence
It's one of those so-bad -it's- good movies but I wish that someone would find a half decent
print.
To
print
this up.
I guess I should have read the finer
print.
It's a wonder she didn't use all her future earnings to buy up and destroy every
print
of this turkey.
Creakiness and atmosphere this film has, but so unfortunately does the
print
I just viewed.
The
print
itself is pretty poor quality, and the wonderful Butterfly McQueen is totally wasted in the wraparound plot.
It's still dull and badly constructed, and even the
print
shown on cable is now emasculated of its original James Brown score.
The only existing
print
was a work
print
without music or final editing, but wherever it's shown, Eagels stuns and captivates with her beguiling, powerful performance.
(One silent of Jeanne's exists in archive
print
- MAN, WOMAN AND SIN - and her only other talkie, JEALOUSY, is "lost," so this is the only document we have of her.
Anyone wanting to know what the best sequel to The Exorcist was should read 'Legion', penned by Blatty it has to be the best follow up to an original piece to be committed to
print.
Most appropriately viewed on an extremely faded-to-orange 16mm print, although Betamax is a good alternative!
The photography (even in a good print) is so murky it is occasionally hard to see what is happening.
The surviving
print
is jumpy and has missing audio snippets, and there are some plot holes left open (how would she know whose son it was if she's sleeping with both of them?), and the music is awfully hokey.
In those days, the Welsh language editions of 'The Radio Times' only used to
print
titles of certain shows without imparting a scrap of information as to what they were actually about.
Both "Caligula: The Untold Story" and "Emanuelle in America" show us hardcore rape, snuff, and beastiality (in both, you'd be suprised how far he goes in "Caligula II" with that one, if you can track down an uncut print.)
And the scene on the beach with Nicoletta Elmi is some of the most relaxed and perfect acting you could see ... Lila Kedrova is spot on as a fellow visitor to the town who may or may not be who she seems ... If you miss the hay days of Euro cinema then chase this out ... There's a decent widescreen
print
going round ...
Available on DVD, though the soundtrack itself is out of
print
(but available "used" on some auction sites).
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.
The direction, music, and
print
color are very good as well as the opening theme song performed by Clancy B. Grass, III.
The VHS
print
was a little faded looking, but I was very haunted by what I had watched.
I had the privilege recently of viewing what is said to be the last 35mm, Technicolor, stereo
print
and found it much livelier and more touching than remembered.
It was in polarized 3-D (Gray glasses not red & blue) It was so much fun to watch this film with an audience, the
print
was excellent and the 3-D perfect.
So many early British sound films that I've seen on video suffer from either poor
print
transfer quality or poor sound or both.
This is an account of events that have been covered in
print
several times, and I had read two books - 'A Voyage for Madmen' and 'The Strange Last Voyage of Donald Crowhurst' before seeing the film in Sheffield just before Christmas.
I even overlook the fact that the
print
I have wasn't quite put back together correctly.
Jean Gabin gives his usual excellent performance.The Technicolor photography on the
print
I saw was exquisite.An easy evening's viewing.
In
print
this is one of the greatest short stories ever written, brought brilliantly and poetically to the screen by this father-son team, working together, sadly, for the first and last time.It is fitting that John Huston should end his career on a high note by bringing the work of one of his favorite author's to the screen, in what is easily the best Joyce screen adaptation.
Well worth seeing and it's criminal that the DVD is out of
print.
when i went to buy it they told me it was out of
print
and i couldn't order it so i just today thought i would look.
The fact that this film was shown at London's Barbican suggests to me that the
print
must have been acceptable enough for such a showing.
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