Screening
in sentence
622 examples of Screening in a sentence
I saw this film at the Boston Internation Festival of Women's Cinema last night, and was saddened to hear Ms. Troche tell us (in her Q&A after the screening) that she doesn't expect to see too much US distribution, due to her insistence on including all of the so-called "gay content".
At the
screening
last night I witnessed a brilliant addition to the history of cinema.
I saw a test
screening
of Blurred recently, and I am surprised to say that it was actually pretty good!
The footage of an audience coming out of a daytime
screening
of the Exorcist was priceless.
I saw this film at a small
screening.
If you have seen such kind of story before, you would know what the ending would come out after watching for the first twenty minutes... the script, the positioning of the actors and the
screening
is too obvious...
I saw SEA OF DUST as part of a NYC
screening
audience several years ago.
I saw a free
screening
in NY the other night.
But it short, I definitely would not recommend attending a free
screening
or paying to watch this film.
If this sounds like something that you probably won't like, then stay far away from it, because you will most likely walk out of the theater during the halfway mark like several people at the
screening
I attended.
But this Omen movie which i saw at a midnight
screening
didnt bring chills it brought laughter.
I also saw this movie at a local
screening
about a year ago.
I went to a
screening
of this movie and while it had a couple moments that made me laugh, it had some very major flaws.
Well, I have no idea why distributors put their eye on this particular uh "movie", which had almost no
screening
around the world.
I really must have caught a different film from the rest of the commentators on this site because at a
screening
of the film last night the audience was so mortified by the dialoge that (I'm not even kidding)half walked out.
I saw an early
screening
of this film in New York and I, along with my friends and pretty much the entire audience, were vastly disappointed.
I went to a
screening
of this film a few months ago and was quite disappointed with the outcome.
I caught this at a test
screening.
For movies to be made these days, the script goes to a massive
screening
process and very very few scripts actually make it to the production stage...I can't comprehend how this one got past the first draft stage...
Granted, there were long term side-effects and risks of brain damage, memory loss (and) intellectual impairment, upon the
screening
such a film.
I am very surprised by the positive comments because there were four of us that saw this at one
screening
and we all walked out.
I must admit that the
screening
at the festival wasn't so good so maybe I missed out something here but at the end of the movie, I couldn't help thinking 'I feel like watching Argento's 'Inferno' again.
Since most review's of this film are of
screening'
s seen decade's ago I'd like to add a more recent one, the film open's with stock footage of B-17's bombing Germany, the film cut's to Oskar Werner's Hauptmann (captain) Wust character and his aide running for cover while making their way to Hitler's Fuehrer Bunker, once inside, they are debriefed by bunker staff personnel, the film then cut's to one of many conference scene's with Albin Skoda giving a decent impression of Adolf Hitler rallying his officer's to "Ultimate Victory" while Werner's character is shown as slowly coming to realize the bunker denizen's are caught up in a fantasy world-some non-bunker event's are depicted, most notable being the flooding of the subway system to prevent a Russian advance through them and a minor subplot involving a young member of the Flak unit's and his family's difficulty in surviving-this film suffer's from a number of detail inaccuracies that a German film made only 10 year's after WW2 should not have included; the actor portraying Goebbels (Willy Krause) wear's the same uniform as Hitler, including arm eagle- Goebbels wore a brown Nazi Party uniform with swastika armband-the "SS" soldier's wear German army camouflage, the well documented scene of Hitler awarding the iron cross to boy's of the Hitler Youth is shown as having taken place INSIDE the bunker (it was done outside in the courtyard) and lastly, Hitler's suicide weapon is clearly shown as a Belgian browning model 1922-most account's agree it was a Walther PPK-some bit's of acting also seem wholly inaccurate with the drunken dance scene near the end of the film being notable, this bit is shown as a cabaret skit, with a intoxicated wounded soldier (his arm in a splint) maniacally goose-stepping to music while a nurse does a combination striptease/belly dance, all by candlelight... this is actually embarrassing to watch-the most incredible bit is when Werner's Captain Wust gain's an audience alone with Skoda's Hitler, Hitler is shown as slumped on a wall bench, drugged and delirious, when Werner's character begin's to question him, Hitler start's screaming which bring's in a SS guard who mortally wound's Werner's character in the back with a gunshot-this fabricated scene is not based on any true historic account-Werner's character is then hauled off to die in a anteroom while Hitler prepare's his own ending, Hitler's farewell to his staff is shown but the suicide is off-screen, the final second's of the movie show Hitler's funeral pyre smoke slowly forming into a ghostly image of the face of the dead Oskar Werner/Hauptmann Wust-this film is more allegorical than historical and anyone interested in this period would do better to check out more recent film's such as the 1973 remake "Hitler: the last 10 day's" or the German film "Downfall" (Der Untergang) if they wish a more true accounting of this dramatic story, these last two film's are based on first person eyewitness account's, with "Hitler: the last 10 day's" being compiled from Gerhard Boldt's autobiography as a staff officer in the Fuehrer Bunker and "Downfall" being done from Hitler's secretary's recollection's, the screen play for "Der Letzte Akte" is taken from American Nuremberg war crime's trial judge Michael Musmanno's book "Ten day's to die", which is more a compilation of event's (many obviously fanciful) than eyewitness history-it is surprising that Hugh Trevor Roper's account,"The last day's of Hitler" was never made into a film.
I saw this film at a pre-release
screening
at the Writers Guild theater in Beverly Hills.
If there is a hell, it contains a
screening
room in which GRAND CANYON is playing over and over again on an eternal loop.
Relying on the positive reviews above, we saw a free
screening
of this last night.
I caught this movie at a small
screening
held by members of my college's gaming club.
I had the greatest enthusiasm going in to the advance
screening
for this movie.
Its not, and he in fact discovers nothing of even mild interest in this absolutely silly and self-indulgent glorified home movie, suitable for
screening
at (the director's) drunken family reunions but certainly not for commercial - or even non-commercial release.
I saw this film at its New York's High Falls Film Festival
screening
as well and I must say that I found it a complete and awful bore.
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