Spring
in sentence
1183 examples of Spring in a sentence
Produced in the
spring
of 1958, in Vienna, and released in 1959, this movie was quite popular in his early years.
perhaps it's the human likeness, or the blank stare, or the fact that you know it's about to
spring
an attack. . .
Kafka's The Trial, Melville's Bartleby, The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin and Groundhog Day instantly
spring
to mind.
As her love for her current boyfriend, Jasper, fades away, her love for Kelley blooms like a new
spring
flower.
No wonder those faces look hard and unforgiving; they're just reflecting the soil from which they
spring.
I hesitate to label it a "premiere" of any sort, since it was shot in the
spring
of 2004 and had its world premiere at Tribeca in 2005.
The stark, wide open plains and badlands of eastern Montana are captured in the spare, muted earth tones of autumn or early
spring.
There must be something to this storyline, for it seems as if every other family drama that comes down the pike uses this device in one form or another ("Paradise" and "Moonlight Mile" are just two of the more recent examples that
spring
immediately to mind, although one could reach back to a golden oldie like "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" to make the point as well).
I was given the solo "Summertime" in 5th grade for our
spring
choral concert.
Director and auteur Jean-Pierre Rappenau was 8 years old during the
spring
of 1940 as France's Third Republic disintegrated in a matter of a few weeks.
He's an older man living in the late autumn of his life, yet frolics about as a jubilant school boy who's just entered a
spring
meadow.
I used to practically live on VH1 up until the
spring
or winter, I forget which one now, of 2002 when garbage like this started to appear for absolutely no reason whatsoever.
It sounded so promising back in the
spring
of 1980, I remember.
I watched this over my
spring
break and it is very safe to say that I feel that I was gypped out of 114 minutes of my vacation.
There has been VERY good VERY low-budget movies (Street Trash and Filthy McNasty
spring
to mind), but this one is scraping the bottom of the barrel.
I tried to describe the content of the movie to a friend, and we both ended up laughing because I could only stammer things like "well then the winter comes, and then spring, and then there's an eagle, and a river, and one time it is dark, and the girl goes into a cave, and another time the fox has babies" and so on.
Watch them as they pounce, crawl along the ground (on their backs or stomachs) like a caterpillar, fly through the sky, climb buildings, hide and
spring
from trees, throw about ninja stars, role out blue welcome mats, disappear in smoke bombs, make a lot of swoosh noises with their blades and quickly sneaking or trotting about on their toes.
Maybe I'm just a kid who loved the show who's grown up jaded, but I thought that the live-action version was more pain than I could bear, but now they go and
spring
this complete watering-down of the quality TV series on us.
Having now seen several of his landmark films such as 1949's "Late
Spring"
and 1953's "Tokyo Story", I am convinced that Ozu had a particularly idiosyncratic gift of conveying the range of feelings arising from intergenerational conflict through elliptical narratives and subtle imagery.
They really can't get stupider than this film dealing with 3 losers who try to capture the college spirit during the annual
spring
break festivities at many of our higher schools of learning.
Simply awful slasher, molded from the I KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER type of fodder, has beautiful wealthy college students spending
spring
break in a Florida condo being murdered one by one.
In a movie theatre surrounded by children who were on
spring
break, there was not a sound so I know the children all liked it.
I saw this movie on the BIFFF Festival in Brussel,
spring
2004.
They have to prevent the "uncool" daughter of the senator (the always cute Amber Tamblyn from the TV series "Joan of Arcadia") to embarrass her during
spring
break.
Four teenage girlfriends drive to Fort Laurdale for
spring
break.Unfortunately they get a flat tire in Medley,Georgia and one of the girls witnesses a brutal murder deep in the woods.The local sheriff is behind the crime and the nightmare begins..."Shallow Grave" is a pleasant low-budget surprise.The cast is likable enough,the direction is steady and the violence is particularly nasty and misogynistic.Especially the second murder is pretty grim.The murderous sheriff isn't one-dimensional character-in a couple of scenes it seems that he feels remorse for what he's done.The subplot involving the two boys they meet in the diner goes nowhere,but the stalking scenes in the woods are tense and exciting.7 out of 10.
The best kids movies are the ones that are scary or have mildly disturbing imagery, Neverending Story and Return to Oz
spring
to mind, but in the case of the Great Yokai War Miike probably takes things a little too far.
They end up getting a look at Alice Van Doren (Christine Mcintyre)singing the voice of
spring.
They play a record of the voices of
spring
and all is going well until Moe destroy the record on Curly's head.
This foursome will eventually merge together into becoming deep friends only because the story is so filled with
spring
and an overwhelming, dreamy sweetness it almost preordains it, but this is fine; it's the movie it wants to be.
Australian Fred Schepisi (A Cry in the Dark) directs this comedy/ romance that is fun, relaxing, and set in the
spring.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Their
There
After
Would
About
Could
Where
Summer
Winter
First
World
Countries
Political
Since
Years
During
Through
Country
Government