Tales
in sentence
395 examples of Tales in a sentence
This is, mostly, a nice romance for those who adore
tales
of affection.
His
Tales
of the South Pacific became a major blockbuster Broadway hit for Rodgers&Hammerstein.
This is actually a trilogy of 3 of Somerset Maugham's short
tales.
Bettie Page was a cult icon of an era which included not just McCarthyism but the banning of comics (such as
Tales
from the Crypt) on the basis that they would turn youths into half-mad juvenile delinquents.
This film is a quite entertaining horror anthology film (along the lines of
Tales
from the Crypt) written by Robert Bloch (author of Psycho).
Much helped by a very decent performance from Corrado Pani as the cigar chomping guy who seeks to unravel one of the most complicated of
tales.
Two adaptations of Edgar Allen Poe's dark
tales.
The version of this Film that I have is Called "Dark
Tales
of Japan" Which actually features 5 short horror flicks not 8, and they are all well over 5 minutes long.
They include "The Spiderwoman (Kumo Onna) Directed by Yoshihiro Nakamura, "Crevices" (Sukima) Dir by Norio Tsuruta, "The Sacrifice" (Onamakubi) Dir by Koji Shiraishi, Blonde Kwaidan (Kinpatsu Kaidan)-Directed by Takashi Shimizu,& "Presentiment" (Yokan) Dir by Masayuki Ochiai I'm not sure what versions that have in Japan of this, but once again the American title out here is "Dark
Tales
of Japan.
Buster Poindexter, I mean David Johansen, is the story teller of these three
tales
from the crypt, sorry ,
tales
from the crap.
Animated children's movies should really stick to real fairy
tales
rather than manufacturing them out of grim novels and grimmer history.
Everything is rote, from the obligatory crew of friends (Black, gay, boyfriend) to the really awful story transitions that actually come from nowhere; you're just expecting them because that's how these
tales
go, and not because the script properly sets them up.
I've seen a few movies about "magical reality" -- that fantasy zone where fairy
tales
and the real world cross, forcing jaded adults and child-like idealists to war over the relevance of imagination in a world full of disappointment.
Then there's "Neverwas," a film so full of unnecessary flash and "magical reality" clichés that it shames the stories from which it pilfered its name... namely J.M. Barie's
tales
of Neverland and Neil Gaiman's "Neverwhere."
If you want to see a really good TV show about the struggle to "make it" in the movies, look for
"Tales
from the Hollywood Hills: A Table at Ciro's."
I really like morality
tales
but I feel a bit ripped when the ending doesn't end with a crash and burn (much like Risky Business or The Graduate).
While judged as against other films that tell
tales
of working class survival, it has not the political anger of the works of Ken Loach, the emotional impact of 'Brassed Off' or the jauntiness of 'The Full Monty'.
Tales
of a plague spreading across the Earth, sightings of bizarre beings as well as planes and cars malfunctioning fills the airwaves.
It's an episode movie, but not Boccaccio-style, tale by tale, the
tales
are developing from each other, and some characters keep reappearing.
He tells three
tales
of homophobia and how it is has effected the lives of several Homer citizens.
The six
tales
(that's six on my tape) are all shot outside, all dialogue-lite and all appalling.
guess it's supposed to be something like
"Tales
From the Crypt" or "Creepshow",but it certainly doesn't measure up to either of those anthology series.i
I love all the Disney fairy
tales
and while the sequels usually are awful this one was done perfectly!
Fellow Gothic Horror enthusiast have warned me about the film, and so did several other reviews on this great page, but as an enthusiastic fan of even the cheesier kind of Gothic Tales, who loved the other Amicus Productions, I still decided to buy it cheaply, especially since Vincent Price is my all-time favorite actor.
As well as the infamous quote, "Dead men tell no tales!".
Making people forget those Vincent Price anthologies or
Tales
from the Crypt shows, is not going to happen.
Francis made some great British horror classics in the 70's, like "The Creeping Flesh" and
"Tales
that Witness Madness", while Wiederhorn single-handedly was responsible for the only recommendable 'underwater-Nazi-zombie' flick ever made: the unique "Shock Waves".
Lovers of old Gothic
tales
and suspense movies will not be disappointed.
It takes a couple of free-thinking college kids to put together such a video, since the media gets paid to divert our attention from real facts with inane terrorist warnings, "muscle" hijacker tales, bogus pancake theories and other heroic schlock.
Recommended for fans of
Tales
from the Darkside,
Tales
from the Crypt, The Twilight Zone and admirers of Takashi Miike and Chan-wook Park.
Back
Next
Related words
Fairy
About
Which
Story
Other
Their
Stories
There
Great
While
Three
Could
World
Horror
Always
Really
Movie
Films
Would
People