Sequence
in sentence
1351 examples of Sequence in a sentence
Director Adam Marcus, working from a clever script by Dean Lorey and Jay Huguely, relates the compelling story at a constant snappy pace, maintains a mean, brutal tone throughout, delivers plenty of nasty gore (a young lady getting impaled on a tent spike while doing just what you think with her boyfriend rates as the definite splatter highlight), further tarts things up with a welcome sense of self-mocking black humor, offers a generous sprinkling of tasty female nudity, stages the murder set pieces with rip-roaring brio (the delightfully outrageous diner massacre
sequence
in particular seriously smokes), and really goes for broke with a gloriously wild ending which comes complete with one doozy of a sequel set-up punchline.
Even so, this is not saying JEZEBEL is an inferior film -- it's not, and has some very beautiful moments, especially the dance
sequence
where Julie and Pres are progressively left alone in the middle of the ballroom, and of course Julie, pleading to Press in her white dress, falling to the floor like a reverse bloom.
Added touches such as subtle shots focusing on the period's social customs, and a knock-out ballet
sequence
in a party scene are among the final master touches to this unique production.
I remember watching Cannonball run when i was just a child, the opening
sequence
with the black Lamborghini simply blew me away, and i have loved that car every since.
It's also, included, no kidding, as a notice right before the title
sequence
for WITCHTRAP.
Of course, there is a dream
sequence
which starts to get downright silly, and that takes the film in a weird direction, involving psychological issues.
A bit of nudity, a
sequence
where a female patient gives a man in a wheelchair a blow-job and has sex with him and a scene where a woman has needles stuck into her face is about it.
The result was lifeless and over-elaborate; here, the level of elaboration is just right, with no
sequence
allowed to be more complicated than it is clever.
An example being the
sequence
at the girls house after the first date to the bar, which was rather lame as far as the story and especially the acting goes.
The song during the opening title sequence, "Shakedown," is perfect as it really got me pumped up for what was about to come.
Like the original, this movie also has a strip club
sequence
and as an added bonus, shots of scantily clad "Playboy" bunnies.
There is ONE remotely interesting
sequence
in this film, though, and that's inside the auditorium where Mr. Satan gives a lecture about good and evil.
The predictable happy ending is capped off by yet another forgettable dance sequence, making one yearn for the comparably energetic, stylish excellence of "Footloose" or "Dirty Dancing".
He doesn't understand how to portray the actors properly... (both Chevalier and MacDonald look absolutely terrible at times)... their acting is unbelievable as well as the manner in which they handle the songs... they amade by Paramount in which she sings "Love Me Tonight" .. this short
sequence
is better than any musical
sequence
in the actual film) I don't understand why people praise "Mamoulian" so much... he was a terrible director..
The luggage sequence, being dumped down in the middle of the central park, breaking off the tooth scene, to name a few.
Yeah, it's a B-Movie, but It's very well made, from the great title
sequence
to the vague depiction of the "Monster".
I think the reason there's no cross-cutting is that there's no content - some lawyer clearly wouldn't let them talk about Moog's battles with the company that bears his name (don't ask me for more detail), and all that's left is a
sequence
of short arbitrary rambles - still life with Gershon Kingsley, still life with DJ Spooky (who is a pompous ass), Moog picking bell peppers, et cetera, plus some wan recitations of the word 'spirituality.'
Filmed in Romania on the cheap with an "international" cast, the film looks good and has a terrific stunt car
sequence
at the beginning that really needed to be closer to the end, as nothing else that exciting happens anywhere else in the flick.
Even though you never forget the seriousness of the situation, you start enjoying the
sequence
and the slight turns of the plot.
His voice is pain, so if you like that sort of thing, watch the beginning
sequence.
The final scenes were probably the worst animated
sequence
I have ever seen.
There are at least three reasons to love this movie: The performance of the director himself as the psychopathic ticket collector; the short segment showing musical indifferencies between dutch construction workers and Indian immigrants, and the timeless
sequence
that just hints at a very weird sexual orientation of a designer.
As always, there are a number of stand-out sequences, and the stand-out
sequence
in this is Amy Irving's escape from the institute where she is being groomed for "evil" by the charming but twisted Cassavetes.
William's scoring of this
sequence
is stunning.
There is a very creepy dream
sequence
at the beginning that plays into the fear of where that yellow bus really takes you and a real fun pool party, nightmare style.
Ray Harryhausen's extraordinary stop-motion animation creatures include a chess-playing baboon (the
sequence
where the baboon reacts to its reflection in a mirror with startled grief is truly remarkable), a trio of skeletal sword-wielding humanoid insect demons, a powerful bronze colossus called the Minoton, a savage gigantic walrus, a helpful horned club-brandishing troglodyte, and a ferocious saber-toothed tiger.
opening sequence,with the so called flaming skull,looked like it was made on the cheap,to be polite.normally,i
And the transformation
sequence
of a human into a werewolf - something the original Howling was famous for - is bizarre and goofy in this movie.
The jerky camera shots and silly jogging through the woods
sequence
just added to my disgust.
Announcing at the same time that he changed the script from younger British boy to older American boy to avoid having yet another Harry... Well, Susan Cooper's book series the Rising of the Dark
sequence
was written long before Harry Potter and it has all the material for a good movie.
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