Suicide
in sentence
982 examples of Suicide in a sentence
"The police ruled my father's death a
suicide.
Upon his death, a dedicated police detective called Robert Thorn (Charleston Heston) seeks the truth behind his apparent
suicide.
Grace Trevethyn is a widow,who lives in a small town in U.K. and has many financial problems because of her dead husband, who committed
suicide
since he was full of debts.
It is Christmas eve and Frank Morgan's character (the owner of the shop - Mr. Matuschek)is recovering from his broken marriage and a
suicide
attempt.
I have seen Slaughter High several times over the years, and always found it was an enjoyable slasher flick with an odd sense of humor, but I never knew that it was filmed in the UK, and I never knew that the actor that plays Marty Rantzen (Simon Scuddamore) committed
suicide
after the film was released.
I had an uncle who committed
suicide
after serving in Vietnam because of mental problems he experienced after coming back.
But it opened with a good scene and the killer murdered two victims immediately and flashed forward twenty years later where his son who had witnessed him kill the two people(including his mother) and he even witnessed his fathers
suicide
is going to a secluded cabin in the woods with his friends and his girlfriend where he attempts to face his fears until a wooden statue comes to life with his fathers spirit.
A young woman who is a successful model, and is also engaged to be married, and who has twice attempted
suicide
in the past, is chosen by a secretive and distant association of Catholic priests to be the next "sentinel" to the gateway to Hell, which apparently goes through a creepy old, but well maintained Brooklyn apartment building.
I once lived with a roommate who attempted suicide, and our apartment was in a building where you could get a fifty dollar noise violation for sneezing after midnight - so, needless to say, I can easily relate to Polanski's "The Tenant."
However the Overlook hotel has a murky past with a previous caretaker murdering his entire family before committing
suicide
& Danny has the ability to 'shine' which means he has psychic powers that let him see & hear things 'ordinary' people can't.
Stragely, all but the Mexican director chose to portray the problems of individuals or groups in connection with 9-11: the Afghan refugees, deaf people, Palestinians, the widows of Srebrenica, AIDS and poverty and corruption in Africa, Pinochets coup and ensuing bloodbath,
suicide
bombings in Israel, paranoia-hit and state-persecuted Muslim Americans in the USA, old people living alone, and the aftermath of WWII in the hearts of Asian soldiers.
A long sea voyage follows, with Welles in tow as bodyguard, and the plot thickens when Sloan's law partner (Glenn Anders) turns up and starts making trouble by giving odd speeches about
suicide
and other morbid topics that suggest that the man is on the verge of mental breakdown.
Talented detective Mr. Philo Vance (William Powell) cancels his overseas trip to investigate an apparently cut and dried case of
suicide
he has good reason to suspect is really something much more, a rather deliciously complex murder!
It all starts with a
suicide.
Some of the disaster scenes were hard to forgot, like the frozen baby, or the guy who committed
suicide
after killing someone in the unruly crowd.
Simon's play has been nicely expanded for the screen with a silent prologue chronicling a depressed Felix's
suicide
attempt that is a winner.
Noam and Ashwar's early love is complicated by
suicide
bombings, armed security check points, and racism.
Felix's wife leaves him at the start of the movie, and after an aborted
suicide
attempt he moves in with poker buddy Oscar.
At first it seems to be a rather pedestrian movie about a guy (Trelkovsky) who needs an apartment and rather crassly invites himself into one when the current tenant (a woman) commits
suicide.
This is actually one of my favorites of his movies - second, after "Rosemary's Baby", of course - and is a straight forward journey into the mental collapse of a man who moves into the former apartment of a
suicide
victim.
He's trying to atone for his sins - yes, Gary did attempt
suicide
after the initial doc was aired - through correction, commentary, and convention, reclaiming such Hollywood-narrative standbys as the best friend and the defiant happy ending (two different ones, with a telling adjustment in the Glover version) and turning them to his own very personal uses.
In her office, late at night, Mary (Corr), a psychologist, takes a voicemail from the father of a girl who has committed
suicide
whilst under her care, urging her that it's time to 'let go'.
The
suicide
element is so brief and tame, that this could still easily be rated G (remember, G doesn't have to mean kids, it just means General Audiences).
The actress gives a chilling performance as troubled Emily Callaway, who after her mothers suicide, goes to live with her dad in a new town where her imaginary friend shows up...scary things begin to occur and the movie really gets going.
The current Chief Inspector, Manni (Paolo Maria Scalondro) is on the case, he talks with the now retired Moretti about the dwarf murders but finds out little except that the man thought responsible Vincenzo De Fabritiis (Luca Faglioli) committed
suicide.
The film doesn't know what it wants to be, one minute it's going for the intense dramatic angle with a girl coping with the
suicide
of her sister, the next it features snore inducing stereotypes trying to party, and get laid.
But before he arrives, Bharati runs away leaving a
suicide
note.
Bharati is still running away to commit
suicide.
The only thing stopping me from giving it a full 10, was the fact that I didn't like the ending very much, even though the
suicide
was a shock, the whole thing about Mr Keating getting kicked out didn't entertain me at all.
When her sister apparently kills herself, Mariko refuses to believe that it was
suicide
and decides to investigate further.
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