Shots
in sentence
1287 examples of Shots in a sentence
(spoilers ahead) Because Ganja and Hess had
shots
that are out of focus, male nudity and just about no narrative sense, many are quick to call it a masterpiece.
There is no movie here - no plot, no story, no theme, no characters, no cinematography, no soundtrack - just boring
shots
of the desert inter cut with boring
shots
of awkward sex - until you finally and mercifully get an ending that is apparently from a different movie entirely.
What made it worse was all those close up camera
shots!
Actually the one good thing about this film is the copious
shots
of New York in the late 1980's which record the city before urban renewal changed everything for the better.
Sure, you could complain all day long about the pointlessly long
shots
of, say, horse-racing, or the sped-up "car chase", or the lack of logic in the story, but you also have to give credit to the film's creativity: it's not every day you can see a punch with the breast replacing the fist, or death via ice cubes stuffed into the victim's mouth!
Like the original, this movie also has a strip club sequence and as an added bonus,
shots
of scantily clad "Playboy" bunnies.
Farrah's blank 'oh my gosh' stares make for a dissonant counterpoint, her star must have been fading around now because we get some gratuitous boob
shots.
Plus, a few
shots
of a plane flying into a camera that's recording a computer screen at the director's house on his off-day.
The highlights of the film are the brief
shots
of bare-breasted native women and a nifty fight between an octopus and an eel shot in an aquarium.
You'll find no plastic yuppie rich boy/girl "wannabee" hot
shots
roaming about the screen, spewing ostentatious insipidities in this film.
Finally, an excellent movie utilizing the dark and brooding past and secrets of India, while blending them perfectly with the modern era...A Die-Hard Royal Guard who is willing to lay his life for his Rana...A Royal Heir with a guarded past...A powerless Rana who has turned murderous...An uncle with greedy motives...A cop with umpteen respect for the old royal guard, yet lots of anguish against the palace...all this sums up to a great story by a master story-teller, well defined characters, some well executed action shots, and great performances, and you have a modern-day masterpiece...A must watch...Glad to know Indian Film Industry can still churn out great cinema...If anyone is criticising this film, just avoid them...and see this movie...you'll be glad...India has made a mark in the International scene this time...
Tibaldi's direction used a lot of close shots, and free camera work, that actually detracted from the story.
For example the
shots
of the 'haunted' house might have been melodramatic and cliché, however this recurring image was often offset with the wheeling stars overhead, creating an ethereal quality that set it apart.
Conrad feels the need to emphasize various aspects of the movie by showing his characters doing the same damn thing over and over again in long drawn out
shots.
Close
shots.
And he would be dead, if only the cops and the other killers who are shooting at him, in the increasingly silly action set pieces, were not such completely lousy
shots.
The rat's point of view
shots
really show this.
most of the time is spent on useless shots, such as a minute zoom shot on a shirt lying on a road.
All in all Stray Dog is a very stylish movie with some incredible
shots
and some ground breaking (at the time) film effects.
The twins are fantastic
shots
when hanging upside down from twisted rope while spinning and wearing ski masks.
Basically all the elements that make a Scorsese movie great weren't there; The violence was comic book (especially the number of head
shots
at the end), the film-making is sub-standard.
Besides being rather short and less-than-satisfying in its plot resolution, my primary complaint about this film is the horrid transfer on the Region 3 DVD which is quite good for the daylight scenes, but irritatingly pixelated during the low-light and night
shots.
The facts documented by photographs taken by those who participated and observed the inhuman treatment of prisoners are indisputable: seeing them on the screen in full frame and in close-up
shots
is almost more than the compassionate eye can tolerate.
It's G.I. JOE, fire a 100
shots
and still no one's hit.
I must say though, there were some incredible
shots
of the backs of people's ears, but other than that, nothing.
They didn't even bother sticking with the "found footage" concept either, as many of the camera
shots
are obviously not taken from the perspective of the characters.
You know where you stand right from the beginning, where you can spot the most ludicrously mismatched day-and-night
shots
since "Plan 9 From Outer Space".
I thought Mel Gibson's character of Martin Riggs of Lethal Weapon would shoot the pilot dead within 3
shots.
His
shots
make Kevin Smith's early work look like a Scorcese film by comparison.
The jerky camera
shots
and silly jogging through the woods sequence just added to my disgust.
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