Terrifying
in sentence
171 examples of Terrifying in a sentence
Working the night shift in a seedy police station, stumbling through life in an alcoholic haze, Detective Mickey Hayden can hardly be said to have a firm grasp on reality to begin with, but when a bump on the head unleashes
terrifying
psychic visions, things get truly weird.
Closet Land is an amazing,
terrifying
piece of cinema.
The cast and crew who worked on it probably could relate to the
terrifying
places the human mind can achieve.
There is drama as the aforementioned psychotherapist (played by Lopez prior to her becoming a solely romantic comedy component) makes contact with the child within and witnesses his
terrifying
upbringing.
Haunting in it's extreme brutality it creates a prison world filled with diverse characters that range from compassionate to flat out
terrifying.
The "cold-turkey" scenes between Sinatra and Novak are
terrifying
and heartbreaking.
The opening scene takes you into the seemingly innocent mind of a comatose little boy, and the things that Catherine Deane (Jennifer Lopez) sees are first fascinating and then
terrifying.
We had good reason to do so, the Asian market had spawned such
terrifying
wonders as Ringu, Dark Waters, Juon - the Grudge, and a Tale of Two Sisters.
Like the Blair witch, people got scared because people assumed they should be scared and bought into some guff that it was
terrifying.
Billy stalks her and eventually goes around killing all these people and
terrifying
the girl and makeing people around her think theres something wrong with her and that shes imagining things.
There was a lot of anticipation and excitement as we'd both heard that this was a
terrifying
film, really scary.
Dr Mordrid is
terrifying.
As the film begins a narrator warns us THE SCREAMING SKULL is so
terrifying
you might die of fright--and if such happens a free burial is guaranteed.
the original was
terrifying
to me as a child for one reason!
It was similar to my accidental viewing of the
terrifying
ending to Don't Look Now in 1987.
John Carpenter and Debra Hill created the most suspenseful, creepy, and
terrifying
movie of all time with this classic chiller.
It somehow manages to be both completely inane and no-brainer, but also
terrifying
knowing and clever at the same time.
George and Kim are traveling with their young son Miles to a remote cabin in upstate New York when their car hits a deer and swerves into a ditch.But what seems to be a mere occurrence of misfortune marks the beginning of a
terrifying
journey,where myth becomes reality and a flesh-eating spirit,half animal and half man Wendigo,haunts a small town..."Wendigo" by Larry Fessenden is a thought-provoking horror film that often tenderfoot's into a somber family drama.The acting is great,the characters are well-developed and there are some bone-chilling moments.The subtle glimpses of Wendigo are handled effectively and it's never clear what is real and what is imagined,or even if the story is taking place entirely in Miles' head.Overall,"Wendigo" is my first contact with Larry Fessenden's work and surely won't be the last.Give this film a chance,if you don't mind watching something unconventional.8
There he encounters the woman in black again in cemetery out back of the house, and things begin to get creepy as
terrifying
noises start coming from the marshes.
The way everything is set up was REALLY spooky, but not
terrifying.
The fact that it is a simple format of a mad man in a mask whom has escaped from a mental asylum and ready to kill everyone in sight without them having any idea that he is there, is just shockingly
terrifying
and indulges you even more into the movie as the events though fiction could easily be come true.
This is the tale of isolation, madness,
terrifying
images, and the ultimate ghost story that will crawl underneath your skin.
The concept is nothing less then terrifying, and afterwards you are left haunted, but also inspired.
this is the first of a two part back-story to the conflict between the machines and mankind in the Matrix world and it delivers spectacularly by combining observations on man's fear of the unknown and of being usurped with politics, extensive religious and historical imagery, subverting expected portrayals of parties involved and an at least partially believable and thus
terrifying
vision of our near future.
It borrows heavily from better-known films like "Deliverance" and "Wrong Turn" but if you're like me, films of this nature never cease to be
terrifying.
As good as it is on DVD, it's even more eerie and
terrifying
on the big screen.
Glenn Close is fantastic and really has made Cruella her own and is believably
terrifying
even when she is "cured" of her fur loving ways, she can instill fear in the audience with her shrills that literally shake the theater.
And it's a fun moment when they, giving a ride to that boy and his granddad, collect bottles and turn them in for refund money.Those darker moments are the most haunting ones.The flashback sequence, where you see the murders happening, is extremely terrifying.When Perry goes to kill the girl, Nancy last, and she says "Oh, please, don't"...The brutality of man, it's impossible to explain.Then the hanging scene.First there goes Hickock and then Perry, first talking to the minister.In the last image of the movie we see Perry hitting the end of the rope.Sure movies,and books may try to sympathize these villains.Especially Perry's character is someone you could feel sorry for.He thinks of his mom, and dad who he hates, but still loves.But it doesn't change the fact both of these men these actors portray are brutal murderers, who don't feel sorry for anybody.They go to this house and murder an entire family, in cold blood.How could you sympathize these people?
Unfortunately, Keller has one very nasty and lethal dark family secret residing in his dank basement: a portly, pathetic, diapered, incest-spawned man-child Mongoloid named Junior (an alternately touching and
terrifying
portrayal by Stephen Furst; Flounder in "Animal House"), who naturally gets loose and wreaks some murderous havoc.
Directed by Orson Welles protege Richard Wilson, it is a stark, monochrome beauty, full of chilling silhouettes and
terrifying
outbursts of savage violence, as Mitchum comes to tame a town terrorised by a monopolist with a private army.
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