Regime
in sentence
4002 examples of Regime in a sentence
Conceit 5: That the Soviet Union isn't a brutal and oppressive
regime
and that we should have had closer times with them back in the 80's.
Not much time is spent on the revolution until the very end, when the Socialist
regime
came and took the property of the boy's father.
As such, it is a unique story, and what's more, is the only film about the Holocaust that I have ever seen that shows that there were GOOD Germans (the helping family in "Anne Frank" for instance was Dutch) who did NOT support the Nazis, and, in fact, had the fortitude to stand up against their own country's immorality and brutality during the Nazi regime, at the risk of their very lives.
A very well-mannered, and yet at the same time absolutely savage denunciation of the Soviet
regime
and the type of person who flourished under it, the film is a faithful adaptation of the long-banned eponymous book by Mikhail Bulgakov.
A true story about a true revolution, 25 of April ; a revolution against a repressive
regime
of 41 years, that was imposing a colonial war on it's military's, for maintaining an empire (Angola, Mozambique, Guine-Bissau, Cabo Verde, S. Tomé e Principe; the first and the last of the great colonial empire's of Europe) of 600 years, since it's beginning in the conquest of Ceuta in 1415; a revolution by the army for the people, and for a democratic Portugal; the most's surprising fact in this revolution is that it were no people killed in it (except those that died in the hand's of PIDE, the political police of the State, during a brutal gunfire against an unarmed crowd protesting in front of it's headquarters in the day of the revolution, in 25 of April 1974, has it show's on the film).And has all revolutions it has it's heroes, one them of was Captain Salgueiro Maia, a returned soldier from the war, whose convictions along with the rest of the army, was that they were fighting (since 1961) a hopeless war, and that sometimes a soldier has to disobey it's country.
There are numerous films relating to WW2, but Mother Night is quite distinctive among them: In this film, we are introduced to Howard Campbell (Nolte), an American living in Berlin and married to a German, Helga Noth (Lee), who decides to accept the role of a spy: More specifically, a CIA agent Major Wirtanen (Goodman) recruits Campbell who becomes a Nazi propagandist in order to enter the highest echelons of the Hitler
regime.
There also must have been a
regime
change at Universal, while it was being shot, because upon being released, it was shown in nearly ZERO theaters.
The movie follows the events of the novel "Cel mai iubit dintre pamanteni"( could be translated as "The most beloved among humans" ), written by Marin Preda ( a very controversial book and movie), a novel which became something like The Bible or the story of Hamlet, very popular and hard to get, due to its satiric contents over the Communist
regime.
Many of the rich, it appears, have a choice with the people's democratic choice, and are willing to use the military for
regime
change.
It details the struggle between a committed detective against the dedicated ignorance of the corrupted communist
regime
in Russia during the 80's.
I commend the people of Venezuela for taking matter into their own hands, and saving their country from the likes of Halliburton and the Bush
regime.
The subtitles could be a bit better for the Non-Punjabi viewer, and i think a little more spotlight should have been put on how and why the religious fundamentalist gathered such momentum in a nation leaning more towards Moderate rule after Bhutto's
regime.
In Afghanistan, during the Taliban regime, women are forbidden to work and to walk on the streets without the company of a male.
Btw the trains towards Timisoara were stopped in those days by the communist regime, that city was practically closed.
I was actually a bit surprised to see a French film that realistically depicted the Soviet Union--particularly in the later years of the Stalin
regime.
Regardless of how one feels about the Afghan war in Canada, the overthrow of a
regime
dedicated to treating women worse then dogs was justified.
Despite its exquisite illustration of the gloom, depravity, barbarity, and hatefulness harbored by the Taliban regime, possibly the most fundamentally misogynistic political government to have ever existed, I am unable to look away from how beautiful and talented the lead actress Marina Golbahari is, and how she exquisitely and tragically portrays her character, and how heartbreakingly beautiful it would be if, unlike last year with Keisha Castle-Hughes incredible oscar-nominated but not oscar-winning performance, Marina was nominated and actually won.
From a beggar girl on the streets of Afghanistan to portraying the horror of her country's
regime
to winning America's most prestigious acting award- wouldn't that be an amazing story we could help create?
Like many countries of Latin America at the time, the nation was ruled by a brutal
regime
run largely by the military.
This kind of political activism agitated the military
regime
and resulted in a crackdown on elements within the church including the assassination and repression of activist priests.
As I was re-telling the film's plot to someone who missed the showing, it came to me how succinctly the film tells/exposes what the women and children, and men, had to tolerate under such atrocious
regime.
Jan is like most Che Guevarra-loving undergraduate Marxists I know, and I agree completely with the frustrating lack of a cohesive politicized youth movement (in the US)to provide an outlet for angst, and dissent from the current regime, etc. but the manifesto of the Edukators isn't particularly compelling.
EAST WEST vividly illustrates the hell of this 20 plus year
regime
in a sweeping epic, in my opinion, among the best of all time.
I could almost feel what it would have been like for a Jew in the Nazi
regime.
Putting those laws back in place would move the country more toward the
regime
in the episode!
First of all as a Hungarian patriot, I honor the makers of this movie (for honoring this event with a movie), and I recommend to see this for all of those, who would like to know a little more of how we suffered during the Soviet regime, but how we took up arms for our freedom, and showed the world that communism is not a historical alternative, rather than a bloody tyranny based upon a thousands of lies.
Not just women suffered, but any feeling individual was hurt by the Taliban
regime.
The golden days of decadent Berlin came to a bloody halt when Hitler's
regime
took over Germany in the early 1930s and gay men were brought down by simple innuendo and gossip (lesbianism was considered curable, but male homosexuality was "catching").
it was disheartening to know that Pakistan, which has a similar culture to India underwent major changes culturally during Zia-ul-haq's
regime.
The real Langsdorff was a man of the highest intelligence and integrity, a tragic example of a fine man who found himself forced to serve an evil regime, and Finch truly conveyed the battle Langsdorff must have been fighting within himself; conscience versus duty.
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