Remark
in sentence
289 examples of Remark in a sentence
On a personal
remark
I must add that is a "bravo" for Argentinian Filmmakers, considering the little good is coming lately.
I don't want to
remark
on any of the actual scenes, because I do feel this is a movie worth seeing for once.
My plot-loss
remark
had more to do with intricacies of Trebor's connections in France, his relation to the dog woman and so on, stuff I'd been wide awake for.
I have just watched "Extase" for the first time, and the first
remark
I have is relative to the horrible quality of the VHS released in Brazil by the Brazilian distributor Video Network: the movie has only 75 minutes running time, and it seems that it was used different reels of film.
You have to keep right on your toes to digest such gems as Loretta Young's casual
remark
that Tyrone's hat makes him look like "an eccentric pall-bearer" (and watch for the shop assistant's astute manipulation of the said hat under cover of the ensuing conversation).
When the friend says on off-hand racist remark, the first man confronts him instead of sitting silently.
All of the characters wait for their turns to speak only to make some lame pun or unfunny, witty
remark.
My vote must be 1, but with this remark: The bottom end of the scale is way too kind in this case, but by all means: this is absolutely fascinating.
This film is not quite as bad as most people posting here
remark.
I remember one time reading a
remark
from Robert Mitchum who was discussing how he came to play a certain part after several of the leading men of his generation turned it down.
As children, we might remember seeing things and make a simple yet direct
remark
about it, yet, as adults, we might see things, stop to think about it, taking into account all our past experiences and teachings, and make an "observation", when we soon realize that there are other people that have their own "observations".
Margaret enlists his help when a casual put-off
remark
results in the daughter's showing up at Nugent's apartment to be painted.
Both are victimized by the gay sports teacher on the football field a couple of times and in the end the boy, Jesse, will come to ask for help from his friend, Grady, and the first reaction will be nearly openly gay even if denied in some side remark, and Freddy will kill Grady through, from inside the body of Jesse : if that is not a repressed homosexual desire, what is ?
In order to be funny, he would have to connect his topics with a joke, or at least make some flippant
remark
that the audience could find ironic or cheeky.
A frequent
remark
that Policemen encounter is something along the lines of, "You don't look like a Cop!" Another one is, "You don't seem like a Cop!"
Everybody has been known to take a sexually orientated or humorously intended
remark
or game too far and can surely recognise the elements displayed here even if they are written rather larger than we are used to.
The only thing I hated was the movie was more about homophobia and gay bashing.Not that I support Nazi skinheads but I don't understand why they were so threatened by gays instead of the groups of black and Asian gangs in the neighborhood.There was an interesting
remark
made in the DVD extra features that mentions that there is more violence within their own ranks then there is violence towards others.I loved the scene in the movie when a huge group of gay men got together and bashed the skinheads back.I have never seen that before in a movie and they deserved the beating.It was nice to see a bit of payback from the gay community.Ironically the most vicious gay hating skinhead David Lee played by David Lee Willson has come out as a gay man in real life.I read a really cool article about this actor and how hard it was for him to play such an evil hateful role.
So is there anything to that
remark
about girls from New York?
I
remark
that I saw this film at Sitges because 5 years ago I saw there Kim Ki Duk's "Address unknown".
We, of course, couldn't help but remark, "More like today!" It's easy to see why this film inspired so many beach movies of the 60s.
I think I laughed once during this movie, when someone made a
remark
about the "Lambada", and even then, I was only laughing because I kind of knew what the lambada was.
Is it possible that there is a correlation between the increased "awareness" of the media on the sensitive issue of sexism which their policy makers seem to believe can be dealt with by ruthlessly crushing any reference to the female sex in a comedy programme that is not totally adulatory,and the increased amount of disrespect and violence shown towards women in society in 2006?When Reg Varney made some outrageous
remark
to a large-bosomed bus conductress was he perhaps exorcising vicariously some deep need in the male members of his audience to do exactly the same thing themselves?Robbed by the self-appointed arbiters of public good of the opportunity of such relief,the nagged,the hen-pecked or the simply inadequate become more and more frustrated, sometimes with tragic results.
Perhaps the most telling
remark
about the uproar caused by "Mommie Dearest" (the book, not the movie) came from the always gracious and intelligent Eve Arden (a friend of Miss Crawford's with whom she appeared in "Mildred Pierce").
The most derogatory
remark
I've ever heard an intelligent people make about this program is that it drags on a bit, but quite frankly that's only because ITV go and stick 25 minutes of adverts into a otherwise perfect fluid 95minute program.
The cover of the VHS edition features a film critic's
remark
that the movie is "Erotic", which gives you an idea of how far from the book this movie has fallen.
It looks like five-year old kids playing in the backyard - although this
remark
may be offensive to the intellect of any five-year-old, or two-year-old for that matter!
The territorial challenge is, no doubt, a mushrooming anxiety; an innocuous
remark
by an American envoy about the Durand Line, which marks the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, drew sharp retorts from both countries.
The opinion also included the following remark: " modern biotechnology, as a technique used in food production, cannot be regarded in itself as ethical or unethical ."
Obama’s infamous open-mike
remark
to Russian Prime Minister Dimitri Medvedev that he would have more flexibility after the election may have shocked some, but, for most foreign-policy experts, he was stating the obvious.
Many economists describe the current situation as a “second Solow moment,” referring to legendary MIT economist Robert Solow’s famous 1987 remark: “You can see the computer age everywhere but in the productivity statistics.”
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