Qualifies
in sentence
112 examples of Qualifies in a sentence
"The Blob
" qualifies
as a cult sci-fi film not only because it launched 27-year old Steve McQueen on a trajectory to superstardom, but also because it exploited the popular themes both of alien invasion and teenage delinquency that were inseparable in the 1950s.
I'm not sure he
qualifies
as one of Hollywood's great craftsmen.
This happy-go-luck 1939 military swashbuckler, based rather loosely on Rudyard Kipling's memorable poem as well as his novel "Soldiers Three,
" qualifies
as first-rate entertainment about the British Imperial Army in India in the 1880s.
Love,lust,strange family ties this movie
qualifies
for a come back encore performance ,situation comedy with a mix of events as this could and should find its way as a remake, I do think finding cast would be extremely difficult maybe impossible,except Jerry Seinfeld playing Dennis Dugan role, this earmarks a couple of Seinfeld episodes that also brought me back to Norman is that you ,keeping them in the closest was surely impossible as impossible to reform pretend hooker girl friend and infidelity of a parent.
Then again, the 27-year old McQueen hardly
qualifies
in the age department, but manages the hot-rodder attitude anyway.
It
qualifies
as almost an experimental film, as the studio that produced it, Metro, was desperately looking for new kinds of films, stars and directors to compete with the then new medium of television.
This one
qualifies
on all counts.
I also like revenge type movies,This
qualifies
there as well in my opinion.Some of my favorite parts of the movie were the opening scene with the whipping and the barn shooting scene.
This story of a family with some real skeletons in its closet still
qualifies
as good clean, sometimes over-the-top fun.
This movie hardly
qualifies
as a werewolf movie.
An excellent film for those into razor sharp, no frills drama, "Heart
" qualifies
as an under-rated "sleeper".
"Scandal Sheet" director Nick Grinde's "The Man with Nine Lives
" qualifies
as a good Boris Karloff mad scientist movie about the application of cryogenics as a cure for cancer.
I have seen some rather hideous films in my life, but frankly this one
qualifies
as one of the all time worst, particularly in light of the immense talent of writer & director Stephen Norrington, an otherwise fine cast, and some incredibly gifted technical people such as the editor and the cinematographer.
"Pressure Point
" qualifies
as just another formulaic hostage thriller that suffers from comatose direction.
This lackluster Errol Flynn oater
qualifies
as one of his minor efforts.
There is no acting, there is no action, there is no good scenes and I could even question if this is acctually
qualifies
as a movie.
An absolute masterpiece that
qualifies
as sin to miss out on.
Belated threequels are usually desperate attempts from faded stars to revive their career and bank balance, but this is so utterly disinterested in doing anything but visiting the cashpoint that it practically
qualifies
as a non-film.
"Ace High" (1968)
qualifies
as one of the better hybrid action/comedy spaghetti westerns that followed in the wake of Sergio Leone's trend-setting bounty hunter movie "A Fistful of Dollars."
She comes along, of course, because she is an Alpha female, rich, corporate executive, which
qualifies
her to fight against Arabs with machine guns.
The film is superb in every way, and
qualifies
as a minor classic.
The lively and engaging acting from a game cast
qualifies
as a major plus: the adorable Felice Schachter as sweet school newspaper reporter geek Bernadette, Robert Mandan as pompous principal Walter J. Coolidge, Scatman Crothers as cranky baseball coach Dexter Jones, Greg Bradford as jerky college preppie Robert Wolcott, Sue Ane Langdon as ditsy English teacher Rose Burnhart, and Hilary Beane as sexy secretary Corinne Updike.
Actually, Kotto's Lieutenant Pope
qualifies
as the most likable character.
While this may not be Allen's most philosophical or deep comedy, it certainly
qualifies
as, at least, a near-classic.
"Dark Alibi" director Phil Karlson's "Kansas City Confidential
" qualifies
as a crisply-made, smartly-plotted, entertaining heist caper about the perfect crime.
Anyway, I don't think this was meant as a comedy (although after the beatnik scene I'm really not sure) but if you're looking for horror this only
qualifies
if you're looking for so bad it's good I need to be high to enjoy omg I'm horrified I paid for this.
The uniformly ace acting from a tip-top cast
qualifies
as another significant asset: Lambert and Locklin make for sympathetic leads, Smith excels in one of his customary bad guy roles, plus there are stellar supporting performances by Jeffrey Combs as flaky, bespectacled computer whiz D-Day, Lincoln Kilpatrick as wise trustee inmate Abraham, Tom Towles as mean roughhouse bully Stiggs, Vernon Wells as vicious top con Maddox, and Clifton Collins, Jr. as scrappy young punk Nino Gomez.
The inspired casting of Tab Hunter in the warped lead
qualifies
as the film's masterstroke; Hunter's blandly handsome boy next door persona makes for the perfect front for the severe dementia bubbling just underneath the surface.
The strong cast
qualifies
as another major asset: Louise Fletcher as the mad Dr. Erhardt, Shawn Weatherly as the fetching Dr. Kidwell, Frederick Flynn as hearty computer technician Tommy Shivers, Lu Leonard as gruff cook Ms. Cutter, and Miguel A. Nunez Jr. as abjectly craven, spineless, sniveling janitor Wiley.
"Captain Pirate
" qualifies
as a mediocre 85-minute sequel of sorts to actor Louis Hayward's earlier epic "Fortunes of Captain Blood."
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