Thriller
in sentence
1284 examples of Thriller in a sentence
Nevertheless, despite its shortage of clever gadgets and the lack of a vibrant musical score, "Never Say Never Again" rates as an above-average, suspenseful doomsday
thriller
with top-flight performances by a seasoned cast including Sean Connery, Kim Basinger, Klaus Maria Brandauer, Max Von Sydow, Barbara Carrera, Edward Fox, Bernie Casey, Alec McCowen, and Rowan Atkinson.
This deceptively laid-back, low-key, casually paced Aussie crime
thriller
unravels with a casual ease and relaxed self-confidence that's a delight to behold.
He also did a Loretta Young suspense
thriller
Cause For Alarm a couple of years earlier.
I just re-watched this thriller, one I had previously believed to be one of Hitch's lesser efforts.
I suppose this movie is not your typical Spanish
thriller
as it is based in a real story that took place abroad.
A shame, because this lusciously produced, expertly directed and written, and crafty mystery-suspense item spins an enticing whodunnit
thriller
against the setting of Radio City Music Hall.
Sometimes, when seeking a movie nothing will do except a good
thriller.
"Jaded" should not be considered as en erotic
thriller
because the sex scenes are not for viewing pleasure unlike movies like "Indecent Behavior" or "Friend Of The Family".
Wow! In my opinion, THE NET is an excellent, nail-biting, edge-of-your-seat techno
thriller
that will leave you feeling good all over.
First half of the movie scared the hell out of me and normally I'm not easy to scare, but second half of this
thriller
didn't work quite a well, but still very scary!
A good thriller, than use simple ways to make good horror.
The first hour of "The Stanford Children" is slow-paced and rather tame, but the finale is trashy and cheesy like the VHS cover promises and like a late 80's
thriller
ought to be, in fact.
Those who want to see an ordinary sex'n'crime erotic
thriller
surely will not understand this movie, as Colin Firth obviously did when he called it "rubbish".
But this is still a good
thriller.
In this crackerjack noir
thriller
from Columbia which is a combination of Panic In The Streets and The Naked City, Evelyn Keyes is unknowingly The Killer That Stalked New York.
It is an excellent drama, an excellent thriller, and an excellent film.
In lesser hands it would have degenerated into an erotic
thriller
made for direct-to-video.
He can play both comedy and
thriller
in the same movie like few others can.
It all falls apart after that, it's your typical Hollywood
thriller
now, filmed on a soundstage with special effects galore, minus any kind of humour, wit or soul.
This movie which attempts to weave many religious themes into a
thriller
fails to make any religious point that I could clearly interpret except to mock people's beliefs.
Acclaimed Japanese director Takashi Miike can't seem to get the wheels moving with this torpid thriller, an adaptation of Yasushi Akimoto's book concerning an evil old woman (and child abuser!) who is part of a new urban legend: if your cell-phone rings with a strange tone--and you see the message 'One Missed Call'--you will replay the message only to hear your own final words before your death.
And then their is The Sentinel, a bottom-barrel political
"thriller"
that ranks among the worst movies I have ever seen.
I'm guessing it does and the result is a
"thriller"
with thrills that are thoroughly bad and yet comedic.
This film can be judged from three viewpoints: as history, as a profile of Amin, as a fictional
thriller.
Distasteful, cliched
thriller
has young couple doing cross-country research on America's most infamous murder sites, becoming road partners with a dim-witted young woman and her snarling boyfriend--who is an actual psycho.
Jochen Hick wrote and directed this little
thriller
of a suspense film based on the concept that the AIDS virus was a sheep virus mutated by the government to rid the world of gays and was apparently tested on convicts in the years before the outbreak of the hideous disease.
But the book--a slow-burning, noir
thriller
with lots of pulp--should have translated into an Oscar-contending film instead of this dud that couldn't figure out whether it should faithfully portray the hard-boiled, gritty crime story of the book, or opt for a 1980s Schwarzenegger shoot-em-up spree.
It stars James Woods and Cuba Gooding JR and has the synopsis of a taught political
thriller.
It comes across as a flat 70s
thriller
until the last ten minutes, when it springs to life.
Within the first few minutes of this Dutch thriller, we learn that Krabbe is a gay alcoholic writer who sleeps sans underwear, fantasizes about murdering his roommate, tries to steal a magazine from a news stand, and lusts after a studly young man he meets at the train station.
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