Sheriff
in sentence
378 examples of Sheriff in a sentence
But especially Timothy Dalton plays a very good roll as the
Sheriff.
Jack now wants revenge on the
sheriff
who caught him.
James Belushi is very good as an ex hood who has stolen 12 million from the boss who has to fend of the gangsters , hillbillies his wife and the local sheriff( Timothy Dalton).you
Sheriff
Lucas gave many a viewer the willies.
Same goes to the beautiful Barbara Hershey who is playing the
sheriff'
s daughter.
Also Michael Parks as modern
sheriff
is a bit underused in his role.
I recognized the
sheriff
right away as The Old Ranger from Death Valley Days and plenty of supporting roles in TV westerns.
American Gothic was a dark, strange series with Gary Cole as the mysterious, probably evil
Sheriff
Buck who is trying to gain control of his illegitimate son Caleb, played by Lucas Black.
I was impressed with Gary Cole's sinister
sheriff
and I was even more impressed with Lucas Black.
Rudy eludes a crazy red-neck
sheriff
in this movie that also features an infamous scene where Rudy dives down a steep hill.
Cheri Christian and Greg Thompson are spot on as the grieving couple trying to rebuild there lives', however some side characters like the
Sheriff
didn't convince me.
Over the movie has a lot of Arnold rip offs, with one liners you'll definitely laugh at like stick around and he kills the
sheriff
with a stick.
The year is 1896.Jeff Webster (James Stewart) doesn't like people.There's only one friend he's got and he's Ben Tatum (Walter Brennan), an old sympathetic man.They're driving a cattle herd with them.That would be their key to richness.In Skagway they run into trouble when
Sheriff
Gannon (John McIntire) takes the cattle.Now Jeff only has to get it back and drive it through the U.S. Canadian border to Dawson.Now they have a group of other people with them, like the ladies Ronda Castle (Ruth Roman) and Renee Vallon (Corinne Calvet).There the two men get into the gold business.Anthony Mann's and James Stewart's fourth collaboration, The Far Country (1954) is a fine western, indeed.The acting work is superb.Walter Brennan makes a terrific sidekick to Stewart.Ruth Roman is brilliant and Corinne Calvet's delightful.Jay C. Flippen is very good as Dawson Marshal Rube Morris.The great Jack Elam and Kathleen Freeman are seen in smaller roles.It's fantastic to watch how Jimmy Stewart overcome's all the troubles in his way.There's just the man and his rifle.But also he's vulnerable.
The makers of this fine film did a terrific job of getting you involved with the characters,as they suffered through this horrible ordeal.The horrific scene in the woods was done so superbly that you forget that these men were just actors,playing parts.I have never gotten so immersed in a film as I have this one.Burt Reynolds and Jon Voight were never better on screen,as well as fine performances by Ned Beatty,Ronny Cox,Bill McKinney,and though he appeared only briefly,James Dickey,the man who authored the book upon which the film is based,as the
sheriff
of Aintry.It is somewhat disturbing,and kids,of course,should be shielded from it,but this is great,dramatic cinema.
Add Burt Lancaster as the town sheriff, stir, and sit back.
Jack Frost then goes on a murdering rampage to find the small town
sheriff
that finally arrested him.
Also Richard Elfman does a great job as
sheriff
and as the drunk boyfriend.
I could enumerate lots of reasons why the scenario is totally incredulous, but simply describing how the film starts, will suffice: A stranger (Sutherland) kills a man who was on his way to a job as a deputy
sheriff
in a small California coastal town.
The sequel of events does not get any more plausible: We watch the existing deputy
sheriff
Sam Wayborn (Bridges), as he plans along with his girlfriend Laura Winslow (Kath), the murder of her husband Jake (Rogers), with the intent of putting the blame on his new colleague.
Later the group of friends run into a creepy Sheriff, who escorts them to bar, filled with assorted weirdos, including a wheel chair bound death metal rocker, suffering from some kind of mental handicap.
No again, they simply leave the bar, and the Sheriff, and his wacky pals are never developed beyond that.
Well , After i watch this movie i have many things to say about it , 1st of all the drama line is so flat , some of the characters if we remove it from the script they will not affect the drama like Ahmed Rateb , Tamer Abdul Moneam (son of Nour Al
Sheriff
), and Yosra (her role is sooo boring), also the homosexuality takes too much from the duration of the film , it's not my business to see the gay sleeping on his face more than one time , they could make his role shorter , and also there's no connection or relations between the people who living in the building , they could even meet each other even one time to believe that they live at the same building , what will happen if Nour Al
Sheriff
Meet Adel Emam once ?
Richard Harris is Sean Kilpatrick, the unlikely
sheriff
of a small Texas town who always tries to avoid violence.
Back on the mainland two of the missing 'kids' friends go to the
Sheriff'
s office - which appears to consist of a hatch in a wall like a cheap all-night taxi place.
Mr sheriff, our friends have vanished!"
The saving of the
sheriff
is a little faked.
The movie depicts the gang as they rob banks and kill on a northward path along the Gold and Treasure Coasts of Florida, running just ahead of the then
sheriff
of Palm Beach County, who was determined to end their violent rampages.
The solid cast contribute admirably sincere performances: John D. LeMay makes for a refreshingly unlikely hero as the nerdy Steven Freeman, Kari Keegan likewise impresses as the sweet Jessica Kimble, Steven Williams almost steals the whole show with his colorful portrayal of flamboyant bounty hunter Creighton Duke, plus there are neat turns by Erin Gray as the spunky Diana Kimble, Allison Smith as Jessica's cheery gal pal Vicki, Steven Culp as opportunistic TV newscaster Robert Campbell, Billy Green Bush as the hard-nosed
Sheriff
Ed Landis, and Rusty Schwimmer as feisty, foul-mouthed diner owner Joey B. William Dill's slick cinematography gives the picture a properly moody look.
Basically Mark Kaminsky (Arnold Schwarzenegger) is kicked out the FBI for rough treatment of a suspect, he winds up as
sheriff
of a small town in North Carolina.
Stephen Root is OK as the Sheriff, and did his job adequately.
Back
Next
Related words
Local
Movie
There
Their
Deputy
Other
Small
Which
While
About
Through
Would
People
After
Things
Scene
Plays
Could
Character
Acting