Settings
in sentence
425 examples of Settings in a sentence
The only redeeming part of this movie was the sumptuous cinematography and
settings
used.
This film needed more odd side characters and more Angela Bettis she was the voice of the woods though and that and the 60s
settings
along with Bruce Campbell and Patricia Clarkson's performances made this worthwhile from my viewpoint, I liked the pacing and effects and the bed in the corner had creepy possibilities that were misused by the writer.
I loved this picture because it has beautiful cinematography and
settings
of Paris.
She also goes into certain social
settings
like a party, the coffee shop, and a ladies clothing store.
The director didn't want to make an accurate depiction from his life, which is his total right, but freely mixed historical fact with luscious, soap-opera fiction with static characters and overblown baroque
settings.
As a kid, I loved those old Westerns where you could get 42 shots out of a six-shooter, the horses running through the same
settings
and a confrontation at the little cabin in Corriganville between the bad guys and the good guy.
Settings
are awful, actors others than the two stars are mediocre.
Cryptic numbers, odd eclectic characters, and fantastic
settings
substitute for any character development or cohesive story line.
The rural often gives way to more beautiful settings, but the cityscape makes for a better set-up for a mystery.
Add to that the tired post-apocalyptic settings, and a cast you never heard of (except for Van Damme, of course), and you've got a reason to leave this one in the bargain bin.
If cinematography and period
settings
were not present, this film wouldn't be able to get any attention.
The segments follow a violin for 3 centuries obviously shooting for a wide range of settings, thus a wide range of stories and characters.
Though the themes are clearly universal, anyone from Brooklyn (or New York, for that matter) will feel an affinity for the characters and the settings, and there are a number of items in the film which give a New yorker a warm feel of familiarity.
The first 30 minutes or so are fairly engrossing (in a "Dark City", "Matrix", "Strange Days" sort of way) and the
settings
and characters are intriguing.
The stories don't even make sense and the
settings
are so unrealistic.
The film looks at the impact of guns and their violence in 3 settings- through the impact on the mother (Marcia Gay Harden) and brother of a Columbine High type shooter in Oregon, a frustrated school principal (Forrest Whittaker) in inner city Chicago, and in a gun store in Charlottesville Virginia with grandfather-owner (Donald Sutherland) and his granddaughter (Linda Cardinelli from ER).
Already the sub-title says it all: "The Terminator meets the last Mohican"... YEAH!!! Awful dialogues, awful settings, awful actors.
The episode plots also had their relevance in war, and there were also some good settings, even though there were certain anachronisms.
The
settings
were beautiful, but every internal scene seemed to have been filmed in semi-darkness.At least the actors didn't fall into that awful American habit of inserting what sounds like 'full stop' every 3 or 3 words, but dialogue was still slurred and on occasions difficult to discern.
This was a film that questioned the personal interpretation Christian charity in a manner that I found surprising for a film of that time All the cast was superb and the
settings
of a small New England harbour town was excellent, the shipwreck scene was very well done.
The
settings
and costumes are exceptional as well.
This was brought across quite well in COMMON GROUND which traces gay/lesbian life in three different time settings: 50s, 70s, and the present day.
The settings, indoor and out are lovely and vibrant.
I love the dark, disturbing
settings
of the dilapidated Victorian house (long since demolished).
Myself, I went to Sunday school at the Temple, and worked with the stage crew in setting up the monthly illustrated sermon settings, and performed in many of them, from the late 1930's till just after her death when I went to the Navy.
I really enjoyed the true-to-life settings, and language.
Some of the
settings
were atmospheric and the acting was pretty good (although the main villain is kind of stiff he's suitably despicable).
The
settings
were authentic and the costuming was also superb.
Did anyone use a monitor or check the F-stop
settings?
Conte works his way through to solve the murder and to learn the circumstances around it in some unusual film noir
settings
amidst darkened hospital wards and empty hallways.
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