Rights
in sentence
5406 examples of Rights in a sentence
I just saw this on Bravo - they should be ashamed that they bought the
rights
to show this film.
I'm a big fan of Troma but I can't figure out why they bought the
rights
to this movie, It's so boring I felt like I was watching for 3 hours.
He gets exclusive broadcast
rights
and sets up phone lines to get donations.
later he was played by Basil Rathbone, Warren William, and Paul Lukas before being consigned to "B" picture status.The other question as always with Warner Brothers executives is why they chose Vance as a character; their penchant was to choose men who operated outside the law, with no apparent discrimination between a vicious murderer and a champion of individual
rights
against all comers.
Anyways, they deal with plenty of men used to getting their way around the women, but this film is remarkable in the fact that it appears that women has made great strides in society, with divorce legal and women's
rights
being recognized.
But apparently Van Dine must have sold his
rights
to each book about Philo Vance one at a time.
And as a pet she says that he would have no
rights
and do whatever she told him.
Apparently, the director and producer never bothered to pay for
rights
to this story--perhaps the fact that we were in the middle of fighting the Italians in WWII might account for their forgetting to consider royalties!
When Stratton eventually creates the fabric he creates enemies in all the textile workers (who will lose their jobs) and the owners (who will lose money since one mill has the exclusive rights), so Stratton in his white suit becomes the most hunted man in England.
Women are inferior of men and especially being an African-American woman their
rights
are less than a zero.
I checked IMDB and I see the writer also wrote "Sorority House Massacre 2" & "Dinosaur Island" for the director -- both minor classics in their own rights, but obviously "silly" Roger Cormon-like Cinema -- this one's more like some of the better Jonathan Demme and Jonathan Kaplan B-pictures of the 70's -- giving you the exploitation element but offering involving drama at the same time -- a real step forward.
Too bad its
rights
are in a tangle and the only print anyone knows of is 16mm; evidently, after Twentieth Century Fox released it (to considerable success), the
rights
reverted to the Army, and if there's a good 35mm print out there, it probably lies somewhere in the bowels of the Pentagon.
However, it shows us just how civilized Iran really is, despite the content of the film, which centers on the struggle of women there for equal
rights
in the simplest of terms: the ability to watch a soccer game at the stadium, which is strictly limited to male audiences alone.
The reality is the only similarity between the two films are that they are
rights
of passage films.
Still full of hope and flying high on the civil
rights
movements of the sixties, times were hard but still worth fighting for.
This reflect Adolphs animal
rights
extremism.
Anyone who uses the word "bigot" in reference to Silverman, or who claims that she only aims to "shock"... is way off the mark... She's exactly the opposite; just Google her and you'll quickly see that she's a huge proponent of civil rights, etc.
A system who hides the truth, and who is violating the
rights
of existence.
An important soccer match where the nation is participating, a teenage girl who understands the game well, loves her nation does not have the
rights
to enter into the stadium to cheer for her country.
But, this is blood money; hush money designed to hide the fact that those in power have turned their backs on one who fought for their political ideals, and to conceal to the world that the warrior colonel's son was assassinated because he wrote for an underground paper that favored the
rights
of labor unions and the common man.
Kowalski serves as a metaphor for Waco and Ruby Ridge, where the US government, with the cooperation of the mainstream media, threw around words like "white supremacist" and "right wing extremists as well as trumped-up drug charges to abridge the most fundamental of its' citizens rights, with the willing acquiescence of the general populace.
Not only does it document the eternal struggle of indigenous and disenfranchised people to gain their rightful voice but it also shows the United States up for its dishonesty, subterfuge, and blatant disregard for human
rights
and self-determination.
A remarkable documentary about the landmark achievements of the Women Lawyers Association (WLA) of Kumba, in southwest Cameroon, in legally safeguarding the
rights
of women and children from acts of domestic violence.
In this Muslim culture, where men have always been sovereign over women, according to Sharia law, one can well imagine the difficulty of imposing secular legal
rights
for women and children.
I cannot understand why the owners of the
rights
to this film have not put it on DVD.
An overlong, but compelling retelling of the friendship between civil
rights
leader Steve Biko and Donald Woods.
This popular struggle of a traditionally exploited population should inspire all of us to stand up for our rights, put forth the greater good of the community and stop making up cowardly excuses for not challenging the establishment.
She played the part twice and for this version which she herself produced, she not only had to purchase the
rights
from Adolph Zukor but even give him credit on the film's main title card.
Periodically, I check here at IMDb hoping that someone has had the good sense to purchase the
rights
and put it on a DVD.
This is so very rare for a 'guy's action flick' that even I [who thinks most A/A is violent pap] liked the film and have recommended it to every guy I know.....it's a shame this one was overlooked because by
rights
it should have been one of the biggest action-adventure box office hits -- it has something for everyone without straining credulity or losing the nearly non-stop action moments.
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