Sequence
in sentence
1351 examples of Sequence in a sentence
Outside of a nicely illustrated title sequence, there's absolutely nothing to recommend this singularly depressing stinkbug.
Budget constraints for the film should be obvious to anyone who watches even just the opening title
sequence.
The script sinks to it's nadir in the truly offensive
sequence
in which Janssen's character tests Drivas's character to make sure he's not gay.
An ugly sequence, but sadly one which could easily play in a film today.
So, then, they attack the carnosaurs, but their idea doesn't work(another laughable action sequence).
I'm sure reading this you might think this
sequence
sounds really crude.
But when he lets things get really outrageous (the drug
sequence
is the second funniest moment I've had all year in movies, the first also coming in a lame movie: Andrea Martin in ALL OVER THE GUY complaining about the movie IN & OUT), it's just plain funny.
The fact that the original "Criminally Insane" was less than an hour in length should have clued him into the fact that he had probably milked this storyline for all he was going to get out of it...but instead he opts to use TONS of footage from the original in this one as well, even to the point of recycling the original opening credit
sequence!
Those moments, however, were few and far between ... and I almost did not get to see them because the opening
sequence
was nearly incomprehensible to me, not to mention reprehensible in its violence.
The characters do and say unimaginably stupid stuff (like descending into the sewers unarmed while they KNOW it's infested with rats), the acting is atrocious and there's a genuinely bizarre
sequence
involving the hero having sex under the influence of growth-serum!
The opening sequence, where St. Nick chuckles heartily as he observes monitors showing all these kiddies working hard while singing terrible holiday songs in a variety of languages, seems to go on forever, and with no story.
Another awful
sequence
is one where Jamie is on the unwittingly on the phone with the villain, and he starts doing a phony Caribbean accent.
Even in "Bait," he shows he can direct a hell of an action
sequence.
First time I managed to sit through the first fight
sequence
then lost interest.
The film is an endless
sequence
of bizarre occurrences, or "delights" as the friend reading over my shoulder is telling me.
Seeing Barbara Bouchet on screen is always a pleasure, and that is the case here too; she's definitely the best thing about the film and the
sequence
in which she hangs out of a car naked is the best part of the film.
Situations play out on the screen in an empty
sequence
of nothingness.
Mad Magazine may have a lot of crazy people working for it...but obviously someone there had some common sense when the powers-that-be disowned this waste of celluloid...the editing is el crapo, the plot is incredibly thin and stupid...and the only reason it gets a two out of ten is that Stacy Nelkin takes off some of her clothes and we get a nice chest shot...I never thought I would feel sorry for Ralph Macchio making the decision to be in this thing, but I do...and I REALLY feel bad for Ron Leibman and Tom Poston, gifted actors who never should have shown up in this piece of...film...at least Mr. Leibman had the cajones to refuse to have his name put anywhere on the movie...and he comes out ahead...there are actually copies of this thing with Mad's beginning
sequence
still on it...if you can locate one, grab it cuz it is probably worth something...it's the only thing about this movie that's worth anything...and a note to the folks at IMDb.com...there is no way to spoil this movie for anyone...the makers spoiled it by themselves...
After too many bad memories, I took to skipping this episode each time it showed up in the Season 2
sequence.
There was 1 (one) good chase
sequence
towards the beginning of the movie, and a cool shot of a man holding a hand grenade exploding.
It's just a random
sequence
of pointless chatter joined together to make a 'movie'.
Some of the cinematography by Thomas Del Ruth is good (particularly a fire
sequence
set inside a garage), though he is let down by the scrappy editing--and a fairly bathetic finale.
It was mildly entertaining until the hurricane
sequence.
the final
sequence
is once again quite effectively handled and it was absolutely hilarious.
There's a thrilling opening
sequence
in which the villagers exact a terrible revenge on the Templars (& set the whole thing in motion), but everything else in the movie is slow, ponderous &, ultimately, unfulfilling.
The opening
sequence
is an elaborate crane shot of mountain landscapes.
Director Michele Lupo keeps the pace moving quickly and there's at least one excellent and creative car chase
sequence
involving Puppo & Gemma.
The last
sequence
is probably the only scene where you feel like laughing, but only at how pathetic the whole set-up is.
The pair almost instantly make the wrong choice of customers and get mixed up with some people seeking to recover the items that we see falling to the ocean floor during the opening credits
sequence.
The water tank turns into a well and the drunk Devgun is so bad in the
sequence
that the audience would have wanted him to commit suicide.
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