Theory
in sentence
2204 examples of Theory in a sentence
I bet I can defy any
theory
about this movie with so many questions that can only lead to one conclusion: This movie is a pretentious one and a waste of time.
I like to think something positive can be said about anything in life so in keeping with that
theory
I will acknowledge this film's most positive asset, it was very short for a full length film.
In theory, 'Director's Commentary' should have worked.
This
theory
seems to be verified by the fact that the subtitles refer to it as 'Insomnia'.
At least the book managed to flesh out its hokey conspiracy
theory.
'Nobody knows anybody' is a conspiracy
theory
thriller about a Satanist/nut bomber targeting the religious festivities of Seville during Holy Week.
(And according to the Freudian theory, every girl wants to have her father's child(ren) in her own way.
I have long had a
theory
about her, that she is a talented actress, but never seems to get to prove that, because she is always in this sort of low-budget B movie.
Now, I like (at least in theory) low budget horror movies, but this one makes the worst mistake a low budget flick can make: It takes itself WAY too seriously.
The film, a Universal release of a Protelco-MLC production, is a boring retelling of the
theory
of breaking down the molecular structure of an object, capturing it in a cell as "pure energy," and then sending it back complete to a "target area."
Too much time is spent telling the audience about chaos
theory
and too little time actually showing it.
I have yet to experience any movie that has proved to contest this
theory.
He developed a
theory
to decode genes and block the human ageing process, but if he doesn't come up with detailed reports any time soon, his research will be stopped.
i wasn't alive in the 60s to know first hand whether or not esp was a common fallacy then, but i assume that any
theory
of such nature would simply be discredited.
In theory, films should be a form of entertainment.
If you have any conspiracy
theory'
s going around in your head, you will want to watch this one.
The only one who believes him is Ruth Bertin (Faye Wray) the inspector's girlfriend and lab assistant to Dr. Otto von Niemann (Lionel Atwill) who though apparently an eminent scientist goes along with the vampire
theory.
There's a
theory
of time that posits that all the moments that ever existed and will exist, actually exist right now.
My former Cambridge contemporary Simon Heffer, today a writer and journalist, has put forward the
theory
that, just as British film-makers in the eighties were often critical of what they called "Thatcher's Britain", the Ealing comedies were intended as satires on "Attlee's Britain", the Britain which had come into being after the Labour victory in the 1945 general election.
This
theory
was presumably not intended to apply to, say, "Kind Hearts and Coronets" (which is, if anything, a satire on the Edwardian upper classes) or to "The Ladykillers" or "The Lavender Hill Mob", both of which may contain some satire but are not political in nature.
Like Des Pardes, his another movie, Anand has handled the topic of youngsters falling in the habit of drug addiction, and the
theory
of them coming from disturbed families, and troubled childhood, is quite plausible.
Oh man, why? "Six Degrees" is a show about this so called
theory
that we all are linked by someone.
The Oscar-winning documentary may be dated in its tone and Anglo-ethnocentric approach, but it soars with a spirit of adventure besting even the space program that launched a decade later, as men are willing to risk it all to test a
theory
they think is true.
(filmed in 1947) Dr. Heyerdahl explains his
theory
about the migration of south American Pre-Colubian Indians to the Polynesia's islands by way raft fell of large balsa trees.
But of course the famous scene in this film is where Russell demonstrates to Emil how she does understand the
theory
of relativity and uses toys to show this.
Laurence Fishburne plays a police officer who was well involved in the case and is hell bent on debunking an
theory
that Connery might dig up to try and free the boy whom he and the entire police department swear is guilty of the crime.
According to this
theory
(somehow related to the Chaos Theory, I'm not sure exactly how), every action, no matter how small or insignificant, will start a chain reaction that can lead to big events.
(The six-degrees-of-separation
theory
can be applied as well.)
in case you question this theory, note how this scene ends with her attempting to climb a flight of stars while books fall from nowhere impeding her progress until ultimately she passes out. the next morning when she awakens she is still on the stairs, never having reached the top.
Amazing movie that, in theory, should be boring but is delivered with subtlety and incredible acting that I have long despaired of ever finding.
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