Seemed
in sentence
7070 examples of Seemed in a sentence
It took three scriptwriters to adapt Yolanda Foldes' book for the screen, but this material must have already
seemed
dated by 1947--it smacks of something Ernst Lubitsch might have turned out in 1939.
Maybe in 1999, when it came out, and reality TV didn't have such a dominant presence in the industry, this movie would have
seemed
entertaining.
No one else
seemed
to decide what movie genre they were acting in.
It's ugly, for one, with that trendy 1970s visual style that maybe
seemed
like a good idea at the time but which now enables one to instantly recognize a film from that time period as being a 70s product.
It
seemed
dull to me, much as I enjoyed looking at Penelope Cruz, and the plot details often poorly worked out.
It also
seemed
like an intensely sexist film: if the gender roles were reversed, almost everyone with any sense would be up in arms complaining the movie is intensely misogynist.
This movie probably
seemed
like a great idea in pre-production.
This reduced the script to mere rubbish, the characters
seemed
to be selling ideas in their lines rather than conveying emotions and moving the movie along in a direction.
Later on I began thinking - the Linkin Park posters on the wall and everything else
seemed
to hint that I was dealing with a more recent film.
In fact, a total LACK of production values would have been better...at least the film might have
seemed
grittier that way.
It
seemed
like the director and actors just took this movie extremely seriously and had very cheesy effects, a story that didn't make much sense, and not to mention pretty crummy acting abilities.
I love Anne Bancroft but she
seemed
too young for this role.
I love Sasquatch and Bigfoot movies but this one is just a sheer waste of one's time.Terrible, terrible, terrible!I watched this movie last night, and it was all I could do to finish watching.I understood that this weird crazy man wanted to capture Bigfoot,but that was the only thing that made sense in this movie.It did have some amusing parts though.There was this very cheesy and corny disco club with very bad disco dancing that
seemed
to go on for far too long in the movie.I think the director was trying to fill time.The worst thing was the way the Bigfoot looked.The obvious man in a suit looked like a pink faux fur Bigfoot.It was laughable.If you want to see a very bad Bigfoot movie, then I suggest that you purchase this movie.Personally,
The problem is, the movie was very rarely funny and often just
seemed
pointless and needlessly gross.
There were too many pregnant pauses in the movie that
seemed
more like filler than anything worthwhile.
the issue of parents-kids divide is interesting but was handled in a rather unoriginal manner.. the characters were not developed fully and the kids
seemed
to go from being extermely loving ( in the first 15mts of the movie) to being totally unconcerned about the parents,, this transformation was not credible to say the least..they sld have explored this a little more.
Back in Business
seemed
to be just another worthless sequel made to bring in money with a very thin plot.
Cedric the Entertainer's terrible excuses for flashbacks ruined the movie and
seemed
to be a bad way to try and get the audience to adapt more with the character.
The conflicts between characters and subplots
seemed
to serve no purpose whatsoever, and added nothing to the film except fewer moments of silence.
Instead, they
seemed
to have opted for a bog standard Hollywood 'Paint by Numbers' disaster movie plot and dialog.
The first half of this film held some promise as it
seemed
like the film was going to be a low-key character psychodrama like THE MINUS MAN but then the whole thing collapses into cliche and the viewer slowly loses all interest.
Though the book was not the best I have read, after watching the movie, I
seemed
to appreciate the book a hundred times more.
Jennifer Jones was far too old for her part and Vittorio de Sica
seemed
to think he was acting in some other movie altogether.
By the mid 1990s, the career of animator-director Don Bluth had
seemed
to drop to its all-time low.
But beginning with "Thumbelina" in 1994, his films
seemed
to decrease more and more in quality and popularity and one of the many unfortunate entries is 1995's box office bomb "The Pebble and the Penguin", a film that didn't attract audience members beyond parents and children under the age of seven.
I'm not opposed to violence in movies but this whole thing
seemed
to be nothing more than an excuse to blow away one person after another, many of whom were only marginally connected with the storyline.
Nothing in this movie
seemed
to play out naturally.
Instead I saw very little, it
seemed
like Agustus and Call where just side story's for the great Indian Chief.
It
seemed
to me that the filmmakers had exactly this one idea and tried to stretch it over the ninety minutes by dunking it into a dark, stylish and painstakingly slow atmosphere.
Now I would like the approximate hour and forty five minutes of my life back(it
seemed
much longer).
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