Seventies
in sentence
183 examples of Seventies in a sentence
His Polish film company was closed down by the government due to his support for the Solidarity trade union, which had opposed the Polish government in the late
seventies
and early eighties.
How can you not like a film that has Doug McClure, Peter Cushing, silly rubber monsters, fights, (and for the guys, that woman that was the baddie's henchwoman in The Spy Who Loved Me and one of the
seventies
Sinbad films, not wearing very much of whom my mother said "She wasn't picked for the colour of her eyes"), lava, silly wigs and a daft Victorian drilling machine very much like the one used in the old Thunderbirds series?
First of all, of course that it looks dated, it was made in the
seventies
with very low budget, but that's part of it's charm.
I'm slightly surprised to see that not very many people have seen this one, or the other two, but their worth unearthing if you want the picture of punk in the trans-formative years between the late
seventies
and early eighties.
One of those TV films you saw in the
seventies
that scared the hell out of you when you were a kid but still gives you an eerie feeling.
I was at school in the late sixties and early
seventies
and this film is very much how my school was.
One of the best lesser known occult oriented horror movies of the
seventies.
I can't help seeing some stinging symbolic and metaphoric points at the
seventies
society and generation stuff of the time this movie was done.
Whether you liked the stoner hippie days of the late sixties or the smug and sassy coke-head days of the
seventies
(when the comedy was fortified with plenty of naked babes) depends very much on your date of birth, but everyone agrees that by the early eighties, middle age had killed off whichever remaining sparks of anarchic humour that the drugs hadn't, and offerings like this film and the increasingly terrible spin-off records shot further holes in the hull.
I'm a big fan of Italian films from the seventies, and I wouldn't hesitate to list the beautiful Barbara Bouchet among my favourite actresses of all time, so I did go into this film with some hopes.
Overall, The Rogue will probably have some appeal for people who love the
seventies
style, but unfortunately it doesn't have much else to offer.
It's the
seventies
- WE GET IT ALREADY! 2. If he's such a phenomenal public speaker, why weren't we treated to more than a snippet here and there - and even then mostly in montages?
There were a lot of truly great horror movies produced in the
seventies
- but this film certainly isn't one of them!
At first I thought this movie was made during the seventies, since the picture quality, as well as the storyline and drama seemed taken from an old Kojac episode.
Not to be confused with Lewis Teague's "Alligator" (1980) which actually IS an excellent film, this "Il Fiume Del Grande Caimano" laboriously ends the exotic trilogy Sergio Martino made around the end of the
seventies
(including the rather watchable "L'Isola degli uomini pesce" and the not so good "La Montagna del dio cannibale").
The remake of H.B. Halicki's classic
seventies
chase film is simply horrible.
Colleges, High Schools, Fraternities and Sororities have been the most popular stalking grounds for maniacal madmen since the slasher cycle first became a popular cinema culture throughout the late
seventies.
Although it is quite a bad film, it is watchable - once for me, and does have many of those
seventies
bad film qualities - start-studded actors embarrassing themselves, that made-for-TV feel, and the dreaded creatures of nature reeking vengeance on man.
with hardcore sex and some truly nasty violence thrown into an already bubbling brew of
seventies
sleaze.
Instead, it has the look and feel of so many television movies of the
Seventies.
It is the unity of two heroes from two great
seventies
sci-fi films.
Along the way he meets a hooker with a heart of gold, and ends up facing off with a character played by Kim Milford, the hero from the
seventies
sci-fi cult film "Laserblast", which is, as I've hinted at earlier, the worst sci-fi film ever made.
The problem is that most of the film, obviously shot in the early seventies, consists of extreme wide shots of people walking, in real time and awfully slowly, from A to B. This makes the film tedious in the extreme and the expected blood and gore payoff just never happens.
I'm sure most of the people who watched this unentertaining crap were in their sixties and
seventies
and just tuned in because they had nothing better to do, or simply remembered its star from the old Dick Van Dyke Show.
It was used in the
seventies
horror Deathline aka Raw Meat, featuring a cannibalistic tribe living in a disused tunnel, and the celebrated chase sequence in American Werewolf in London.
I guess in the
seventies
there was a market for news from small South American towns.
I couldn't believe that this movie dates from 2007, it had all the looks of a below-average
seventies
horror-flick.
The sexploitation movie era of the late sixties and early
seventies
began with the allowance of gratuitous nudity in mainstream films and ended with the legalization of hardcore porn.
The
seventies
ambiance sensual and full of drugs is amazing.
In the sixties and seventies, Italian film-makers would get themselves a reputation for ripping off just about every successful American film released.
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