Trademark
in sentence
134 examples of Trademark in a sentence
There are so many little details that add charm to the film (a
trademark
of the director) and the colors and cinematography are what send this otherwise simple story over the top as a marvelous cinematic achievement.
Early appearances from Cherie Chung and Chow Yun Fat are also nice too see, especially for the fact that Chow Yun Fat takes on the bad guys without his
trademark
gun play.
Another Asian horror
trademark
is the complexity of the plot, which is here as well.
Carpenter takes elements from much, much better films (Assault on Precinct 13 and The Thing) and throws them in here as if we are supposed to acknowledge and appreciate his
trademark
style.
Ching Siu Tung's choreography, while still retaining his
trademark
style, editing, and postures, lacks the vitality and originality of his earlier films like A Chinese Ghost Story, Dragon Inn, and Duel to the Death.
The action does carry the
trademark
surreality and over the top nature of HK action, but it's not very involving, obscenely gory, and in fact often completely incoherent (perhaps this is due to re-editing for american release, it does show signs in many places of patchwork).
The beautiful sets are here with all that made the Hamer production values a trademark, yet Paris drowned in the fog is a sign of indolent neglect.
The American Humane Association, which is the source of the familiar disclaimer "No animals were harmed..." (the registered
trademark
of the AHA), began to monitor the use of animals in film production more than 60 years ago, after a blindfolded horse was forced to leap to its death from the top of a cliff for a shot in the film Jesse James (1939).
His performance there was toned down, with none of his
trademark
goggle-eyed stare, although that may have something to do with him being replaced for most of the movie by a cartoon fish.
With a screenplay by Tom Patchett and Jay Tarses and direction by Robert Downey Sr. (whose son Robert Downey Jr. has a cameo early on in a soccer scene), Up the Academy is uneven with the politically incorrect humor but unless you're really offended at the scatological and sexual content, this is actually a pretty harmless comedy that Mad Magazine and its
trademark
cover boy-Alfred E. Newman-shouldn't be ashamed of even though they once had their name and character taken off the picture...P.S.
I am disappointed no critic circles have recognized Andy Sidaris's
trademark
filmmaking.
But you can see, briefly, the seeds of some of his
trademark
images and sounds.
I found it hard to believe that Hawks directed this, as none of the actors spoke with the
trademark
Hawksian rat-a-tat delivery.
Spoiled-upper-crust-babe Domino Harvey (Keira Knightley, in an ersatz-badass performance as shallow as her gorgeous looks) is sick of the shallow lifestyles of the rich and famous in Los Angeles, and accosts gruff bounty hunters Mickey Rourke and Edgar Ramirez to learn a more exciting trade; along the way, there are double-crosses, shootouts, media attention (courtesy of a tongue-in-cheek Christopher Walken, phoning in his
trademark
sleazebag), and laughable hints at romance.
I was so eager to see this one of my favorite TV shows.I saw Universal
trademark
followed with a newly acquainted title and theme song which still impress me.Computer animation on some scenery like a solid title name"The Jetsons" or a dimension view of a spaceship approaching an amusement park and more made this version splendid and fantastic.Shortly after that till the end...I couldn't believe my eyes!!!!How lucky I was that I could forget all I had seen.Just songs by Tiffany and its theme song in new arrangement were in my head.Anyway,I wish to see this space-aged family (also The Flintstones and Yogi Bear) in all graphic computer design as Toy story or Bug's life.The best style for Hanna-Barbera's in my opinion.
He is awful when he tries to act tough - he barely manages to keep that
trademark
smirk off his face while saying his one-liners which, by the way, aren't very funny.
Even his
trademark
gore is gone, bar one scene in an operating theatre.
The portrayal of all things Christian are so ugly and ham-fisted,
trademark
Mraovich, that you can't possibly take any of them seriously.
In this one, however, they don't dress in the silly cop costumes or drive the fast-paced car that's their
trademark.
Visconti's first film has all his
trademark
visual flair and immaculate technique, accompanied by compelling performances from Massimo Girotti as the handsome drifter and, best of all, Clara Calamai as the fabulous, frantic Giovanna.
His
trademark
style of acting works well for the sly Puss in Boots.
By 1940, director Ernst Lubitsch had long ago taken Hollywood by storm, and his famed "Lubitsch touch" had become a sparkling commercial
trademark.
It's more of the typically bleak existentialism and primordial savagery that is Dickey's trademark, but it has all the makings of a truly spectacular, poetic cinematic experience.
It is perhaps the actors best performance.Watch how he singlehandedly stops a lynching-mob.Alice Brady is fantastic in the role of a simple farmer woman.Most of the last part of the film plays out in a courtroom,and there lies the only negative thing I can say about this movie.Most of the characters from judge to spectators are given so many folksy humorously lines that distracts from the serious trial that is on hand.But I'm quite used to this because the humor is a Ford
trademark.
He can't seem to shake off some of his
trademark
body movements and vocal inflections, but that's something even Jack Nicholson has a problem doing.
The work of the Director is recognizable and the type of humor is his
trademark.
Wearing their
trademark
white outfits, they grind through "20th Century Foxes", and apparently all try to cram into the camera's field of vision.
His
trademark
is a goal shot that curves across the pitch and into the net.
It's a relief at least to know these soulless images aren't going to be presented without a human voice, as is the case in Nikolaus Geyrhalter's gleefully cold documentary about the food industry, 'Our Daily Bread.' 'Manufactured Landscapes' contains images of people scavenging e-waste and a town (many towns, really) being wiped out by the biggest dam ever, with a single plangent
trademark
shot of a little girl in the rubble of her own neighborhood eating out of a bowl using a pair of chopsticks almost bigger than she is.
That element never achieves the ominous feeling of metaphor or analogy that it attempts to, which results in the play being too gaudy and losing its
trademark
sense of a thousand mysteries looming.
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