Production
in sentence
6080 examples of Production in a sentence
This has none of the cheap
production
values and sometimes slow plodding of the old show.
Televised in 1982, from a Los Angeles production, this is probably the finest example of a filmed stage musical you are likely to encounter.
The sets are stark, as befits the plot, and clever in allowing the swift scene changes required and the cameras catch the action without obliterating the fact that this is a stage
production.
The beautiful Addie Yungmee is also very well cast and an asset to the
production.
I highly recommend this film; although it's low budget, it has big budget writing and
production
values.
I would like to thank the whole HTV
production
team and Richard Carpenter in particular for giving me plenty of adventures and excitement.
This
production
was quite good.
He and the
production
staff have lovingly and meticulously recreated that world in a film where all the characters are essentially fictional.
Its austerely refined look, echoey sound, mixture of unsubtitled languages, and highly challenging themes being impossible to copy: as much an accident of its peculiar
production
as of the vision of its director.
The
production
values across the board are advanced, in my most humble opinion, for 1936.
Then, too, the script, the direction, and the
production
are very, very nice.
Unlike the usual Hollywood production, the plot actually proceeds in a series of jumps, much like the films later turned out by the French "New Wave", though easier to follow here, especially if you are aware that the film's original title was Paper Bullets.
Sure there are a few odd
production
mistakes that you see when watching old shows, and it takes a couple of episodes to get used to the dubbed voices, but having done that, I was as captivated now as I was back in the 1960s.
This working girls go to hell soap is a time capsule candidate, courtesy of its immaculate physical production, 50s costuming (look at all those bows and pearls), creamy Johnny Mathis theme song and oh-so daring (for its time) sexual attitudes.
I have more recall of the way the movie hit me than I do of the actual details of the production, plot, etc. so forgive me for a rather poor review.
I think the movie works; not so good, but works; it's surely better than a lot of Hollywoodian
production
like "the Haunting" which have a bigger budget, but not bigger ideas...
Just having someone like Errol Flynn play Custer is enough of a clue that the legend has precedence over the truth in this
production.
A brilliant animated piece that was far ahead of its time, and certainly far ahead of anything that was being released in mass
production
at the same point in history.
This is good movie that is flawed in many ways with low
production.
The success in bringing this movie to life was obviously a team effort so to actors, EP's, producers, writers, directors, and all of
production
I say, "WELL PLAYED!" Having missed the credits at the beginning of the movie (it was being shown on HBO), I was so very surprised that I had to actually research (albeit briefly) the internet in order to find the title of this movie -- something so great should have been known by me -- a clear indication that this movie must be re-released!
I expected nothing more than a sleazy, animated version of Barb Wire with low
production
values, much like those short pieces of crap you see on Adult Swim for short term amusement, but can never taken too seriously.
To put on a
production
of any caliber, requires the talents of a varying amount of people, depending on its scale, to bring its story to life.
It is supremely entertaining, moves along at a fast pace and features some of the most outrageously over-the-top direction, production, performances and special effects ever to explode across the screen!
MCBOING BOING is one of the cartoons that have stuck in my head over the years and finally decided to look into it as was pleasantly surprised and was also surprised on the people involved with the
production.
Whatever the truth may be, I'm very appreciative of the efforts made by the
production
company.
- Words cannot of course enough express what should be expressed, but it is the requirement of the chattering classes that chatter is put forward, entered into
production
lines of mediocrity and therefore a necessity in order to express any sensible thought or opinion about something which should not need to be degraded by chatter.
It is a risky business to film such a lavish
production
of "The Merchant of Venice".
The End of Suburbia is an important documentary about modern dependence on cheap energy and the coming peak in world oil
production.
The
production
was filmed in its entirety in 1982 with Angela Lansbury recreating her Broadway role as Mrs. Lovett, the daffy pie shop owner who finds a practical use for the heads that Todd makes mincemeat out of.
The rest of the cast is first rate, especially Edmund Lyndeck as Judge Turpin who gets to perform "Johanna" in this production, which was cut from the original
production
and Ken Jennings as Toby, whose gorgeous tenor fills the auditorium on "Not While I'm Around."
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