Spoke
in sentence
1716 examples of Spoke in a sentence
A lot of vaudeville comics who
spoke
a mile a minute were shoved in front of the cameras to take advantage of the fact that audiences could now hear the actors speak.
The sound
spoke
eloquently of its process of formation - of cigarettes, of alcohol and being used frequently, loudly and confidently.
Besides the plot the movie featured some really great scenes and I liked the fact that everyone
spoke
their native tongue (the french taxi driver
spoke
french,...).
None of these characters has any emotion when they spoke, they were all dried up, and nobody (the actors nor the director) seemed to care.
I give the actors points for effort, but all that hard work could've been spared if they
spoke
in their native language.
After seeing The Story Of Us and talking to others about it, I came to the pejorative conclusion that the folk I
spoke
to just didn't get the film because they simply had not been there.
The fact that the cast
spoke
as if their mouths were full of marbles certainly did not help their cause.
Each actor
spoke
as if they were reading their lines off a wall - broken speech that made them all sound incredibly dumb.
That, of course, is a reference to the first of two films which they did, where Bette
spoke
with an accent that Meryl Streep would never envy.
I kept having 90210 flashbacks when she
spoke
and laughed in the movie.
Albeit the story is a little corny and there seems to be a lot of action going on all the time (which is O.K. with me) this movie really
spoke
volumes to me.
They also
spoke
fluent French instead of Wolof, unlike the older people in the community.
Having lost a loved one recently, this movie
spoke
to me.
The characters wore the clothes from wrong years and
spoke
weird language that will make any Chinese native speaker laugh.
George Romero himself (the man whose take on zombies has helped redefine the fright film for the past four decades) put it best: "It's not about the ZOMBIES, man!" Filmmakers who don't grasp whereof he
spoke
make movies like DEAD HEIST- movies that usually boast some impressive, though often no-budget fx (or even- as in this case- some great zombie "crowd" scenes), but very little in the way of character or story upon which to, say, hang a review.
But I can't pretend I tried to follow the storyline, as I kept missing bits when they
spoke
too softly while I was laughing.
I notice that five of the six people who commented before me on "I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now
" spoke
of the lasting impression it made on them.
If she had not
spoke
up in the seventies, Kerr-McGhee would still have a nuclear reactor plant in Crescent, Oklahoma.
He actually trembled when he
spoke
to me.
Jennifer Rubin is not nearly good-looking enough (at any of the ages attempted in this film) for this role, not to mention that I confess that I
spoke
too soon in my comments on the remake of Not of This Earth regarding ridiculously skinny actresses.
As in "Oh, by the way...." The DVD I watched had an interview with the writer/director who proudly
spoke
of the embellishments he made to the original play.
Everyone in the movie
spoke
with a Jamaican accent and used phrases that are only used by Jamaicans.
The only time I've enjoyed seeing celebrities playing themselves was in that ancient movie "Around The World In Eighty Days" - you know, where Marcel Marceau actually
spoke
a word.
Even those who were critical of the movie
spoke
of the wonderful sequences involving these two.
The big thing about this movie is to get to know about what happened in that time, because no one
spoke
about this when we were talking about the second world war in history class.
Well ya so I
spoke
my mind and it's up to you the people if you want to listen to my negative criticism.
I once skimmed through Cagney's memoir, in which he
spoke
of making these movies, even the famous ones, as being a fairly haphazard process in which memorable scenes came out of last-minute inspiration more often than great writing and far-sighted planning.
What happened to Matalious' strong female voices that
spoke
their mind and came to grips with their own inner strength.
The locations and sets seem very authentic, and the dialogue is evocative of the way people
spoke
at the time.
It
spoke
to me and I'm a white middle-class dude from the Midwest.
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