Shares
in sentence
747 examples of Shares in a sentence
Red Skelton
shares
top billing with Powell, and he and sidekick Bert Lahr are given most of the comedic minutes, although Skelton is more effective when he, if it can be believed, performs as Powell's love interest, with Virginia O'Brien actually providing most of the film's humor as the dancer's companion.
As a biographical film, "The Lady With Red Hair" (the story of how director /producer/playwright David Belasco transformed notorious society divorcee Mrs. Leslie Carter into an international stage star) is certainly not in a league with that other Warner's biopic of similar vintage, "Yankee Doodle Dandy" (what is?), but "Lady" is an enjoyable film in its own right--AND
shares
quite a few traits in common with the Cagney classic.
Although stylistically very different, KELLS
shares
with TRIPLETS and (the jaw-dropping opening 2D sequence of) KUNG FU PANDA, incredible art direction, production design, background/layout and a richness in color that is a feast for one's senses.
It
shares
this failing with a fairly illustrious list of science fiction classics: "1984", "2001: A Space Odyssey (compare its space station with our International Space Station) and Isaac Asimov's "I Robot" (positronic brains were to have been invented in the 1990's).
Ed Harris's work in this film is up to his usual standard of excellence, that is, he steals the screen away from anyone with whom he
shares
it, and that includes the formidable Sean Connery.
It
shares
a lot of its random humour and imaginative story lines with "The Mighty Boosh".
Somebody is wrong, and since nobody
shares
his opinion, he has to escape to Hongkong from the forced mental treatment.
And don't try to say it wasn't his fault or anything, because he
shares
screenplay credit.
This is a smart movie, it has plenty of plot and character development, it has great strong characters, it makes commentary on the newsbusiness then that is relevant to the newsbusiness today and sarcastically
shares
the modern view of government I think, as well.
She and several others needed a way to make the money, while avoid two pimps who taking more than their
shares
of the profits.
Having lost her uterus from DES poisoning, she
shares
a bond with the cancer victims who work in and live in the shadow of the vinyl and PVC factories.
Everybody, like here on IMDb,
shares
the same opinion: the accents are too much ( Scottish accents are a Sean Connery overdose) and the levels are way too short.
Instead, we get a corporate expose about a high roller operator (Ed Harris)putting together a team to sell multi-thousand dollar
shares
in a purported gold mine.
MacLaine, playing grandmother to her deceased daughter's three now-grown children, is in full Aurora mode, but tellingly the only two sequences that work are the ones MacLaine
shares
with former co-star Jack Nicholson.
In the film he plays a gay character (which he really was) who
shares
a flat with a schizophrenic woman and makes his unbelievable shows at the evening.
A young man learns of an imminent nuclear holocaust just as he is falling in love with a young waitress who
shares
his feelings.
O'Neal plays a self-centered critic that
shares
an apartment complex and Stanley is one of his neighbors.
LONG LIFE, HAPPINESS AND PROSPERITY
shares
some qualities with some of its north of the border Reel 13 Canadian Indie counterparts.
Unlike the other film, this one
shares
more of the relationship between the two women.
Synopsis: "Na Nan has known best pal Dong Mi and Jung Joon since childhood, and now the trio
shares
the ups and downs of their turbulent single lives together.
She is accompanied by Nana(who
shares
a similar secret), Kouta, Yuka and Mayu, and other equally important characters, either masterminds, or puppets, or victims of fate.
It was also mistaken for Franco's DEVIL HUNTER because it basically
shares
an almost identical kidnappers-stranded-in-cannibal-country premise.
Variously titled overseas as either "Revenge In El Paso" or "Four Gunmen of Ave Maria," this handsomely-produced, elaborately-staged, sun-drenched, shoot'em up
shares
something in common with the Lee Van Cleef oater "Death Rides A Horse" (1968) in that our lice-ridden hero (EIi Wallach) got double-crossed by his outlaw buddies and left behind for the law to catch while they made good their escape.
Not only is this the cinematic gem the worst thing ever put on celluloid, it also
shares
the dichotomous distinction of being the funniest film ever made.
Investigator Glover is assigned to find a missing heiress in Mexico and Short is sent along as someone who
shares
the heiress' constant state of bad luck (running into doors, falling down, etc.).
He doesn't get that from Julie, (Julie Depardieu), the opera singer sister he
shares
a cheap hotel room with.
Anyone who claims to like this movie must own
shares
in or be a shill for the production company.
Meanwhile, her best friend Dong Mi (Uhm Jeong-hwa), a web company employee out of work thanks to her own sexist superior,
shares
a flat with old pal Joon (Lee Beom-soo, in a 180 degree turn from his creepy role in OH! Brothers), who's as unsuccessful at removing himself from bad relationships as she is successful at bringing home a long string of bad boyfriends.
On a cold night on the eve of WWII in Russia, a diplomat's wife (Tilda Swinton)
shares
tea with a most peculiar tugboat man named Benjamin Button (Brad Pitt).
Unlike the crappy, crappy movie which
shares
its name with this brilliant piece by Genndy Tartakovsky.
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