Resulted
in sentence
731 examples of Resulted in a sentence
It seems that a long-ago witch-hunt
resulted
in her suicide, and she was with child at the time.
However, watching it
resulted
in many nightmares.
Amitabh was alright.. the director wanted to portray how evil his character is but he went a bit overboard which
resulted
in it being forceful.
One small bit of trivia, there was a real drunk-driving accident during filming that injured F.Murray Abraham, and
resulted
in the death of the intoxicated young driver that caused the accident.
a simple search of her house would have
resulted
in the find of the rings.
Having none of the guile, cinematography, desperation or despair of classic noir it relied instead on a convoluted and senseless crime plot that would have easily
resulted
in several arrests within hours.
Hollywood's misguided obsession with sequels has
resulted
in more misfires than hits.
The setting in the legendary Cambodian city of Angkor surely could have
resulted
in a more compelling story but all we ever see are interior shots.
The only way one could explain something like this is a porn party with drugs that
resulted
in the resolution to make a movie just for fun.
This was a minor direct-to-video cult hit which later
resulted
in a couple of sequels - Invisible Mom 2 and Invisible Dad.
Senseless violence and what I can only assume is the written word of yet another junked up "eccentric" writer, who probably considers himself to be an artist, has
resulted
in a film which will test your patience.
Casting exasperated the dreary dialogue which
resulted
in relationships lacking warmth, chemistry or conviction.
I know why,after I secretly watched it when it came on Disney,when I was 9.I felt emotionally gutted after seeing all this evil going on.I was moved to tears.But as dark and ugly as it was,it serves a purpose.To let people what is going to these and other kinds of animals,and why they are endangered.This documentary wanted to get the message across about this endangered species,and I hoped it worked.Its not fake like the True life nature films by Disney,they don't teach about why animals are going extinct.The encroachment of land,the killing off of the foxes main prey,and senseless killing of these beautiful animals;has
resulted
in them becoming endangered.I wish they would make sequel to this movie,(Glacier Fox 2005)to see if they're being treated better.Maybe have it be about a vixen pup named Teresa and her siblings growing up.This movie also kind of reflects what happens to human families sometimes,especially when one of the parents suddenly dies.The surviving parent takes on the roll of both,and tries to teach the important lessons of life.It isn't always enough to protect them when they're adults,especially when some of their lives becomes ruined.Or they fall victims to tragedy themselves.Best all around soundtrack and musical score I've ever heard.
The production quality, cast, premise, authentic New England (Waterbury, CT?) locale and lush John Williams score should have
resulted
in a 3-4 star collectors item.
This is the type of film you either love or hate, which is why I believe a lot of mix reviews and not that greatest success
resulted
when this film was released.
This is part one of a short animation clip showing the history of the Matrix, the war between man and machine that
resulted
in the eventual creation of the Matrix.
His dedication to this role
resulted
in what I think, is the best movie bio ever.
I did not have too much interest in watching The Flock.Andrew Lau co-directed the masterpiece trilogy of Infernal Affairs but he had been fired from The Flock and he had been replaced by an emergency director called Niels Mueller.I had the feeling that Lau had made a good film but it had not satisfied the study,so they fired him and hired another director.This usually does not work well (let's remember The Invasion).But The Flock
resulted
to be better than what I expected.It's not a great film but it's an interesting and entertaining thriller.The character development is very well done and I could know the characters very well.Also,the relationship between the two main characters is natural and credible.Richard Gere and Claire Danes bring competent performances.Now,let's go to the negative points.One element which really bothered me (there was a moment in which it irritated me) was the excess of edition tricks to give the movie more "attitude" and style.That tricks feel out of place and their presence is arbitrary.Plus,I think the film should have been more ambitious.In spite of that,I recommend The Flock as a good thriller.It's not memorable at all,but it's entertaining.
Seeing this in a theater with anyone I know would have only
resulted
in an enforced departure after many fewer minutes than I got through on DVD.
This is the same POW camp that was the scene for the Great Escape which
resulted
in the murder of 50 re-captured officers by the Gestapo (and later was made into a very successful movie of the same name).
He took a risk with such innovations in film montage and form, and the well-known financial train wreck
resulted.
I am not sure when the era of "respectable" medium budget horror started (right after CREEPSHOW 2, maybe) but it
resulted
in a decades worth of uninteresting no-scares and no-offense meant horror efforts.
This has therefore
resulted
in a lack of on-screen chemistry with the new line up and as such the laughs have been very infrequent.
In one, the doctor treats a gunshot victim and doesn't disclose this to the police--even though this violated the law and should have
resulted
in either criminal prosecution or loss of license or both.
Randolf Scott makes a memorable villain, and Wayne gets to use his fists on numerous occasions, including a memorably long one with Scott, which should have
resulted
in a long hospital stay for both, if authentic.
The digital camera revolution has not
resulted
in an explosion of talent gracing our screens.
The sadness was normally due to the innocent victim (who was usually a beautiful woman) being murdered in an unjustified fashion, such as Desdemona in 'Othello'; the anger would have been directed towards the villain in the play whose dastardly deeds had
resulted
in the deaths of heroes and heroines - here we have Iago, arguably the most evil character in the history of literature ('Othello' again); sympathy was not for the devil, but for the poor people who had overcome the denouement but had to deal with its consequences (Horatio perhaps in 'Hamlet', or maybe Father Laurence in 'Romeo and Juliet'); and lastly relief was felt because the audience had survived the play's violence and could thank their lucky stars that they did not have to live in a world so cruel.
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.
It sounds like a recipe for disaster; and since a disaster
resulted
from it, I guess that's exactly what it was.
Instead, forth-billed (after Claudia Cardinale and Hardy Kruger) Peter Finch takes the lead as General Nobile, whose ill-fated 1928 airship expedition to the North Pole, intended to boost Fascist Italy's international prestige, instead ended ingloriously with the survivors stranded on melting ice packs for weeks while inertia, lack of initiative and the poor chain of command
resulted
in buck-passing, recriminations and destroyed reputations rather than rescue attempts.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Economic
Would
Their
Growth
Countries
Crisis
Political
Financial
Years
Other
World
Government
Policy
Deaths
People
Between
Against
While
Public