Training
in sentence
2088 examples of Training in a sentence
A female Government official (Lidia Kristen) informs Dracula that they are going to take possession of his castle and turn it into 'a
training
camp for our young athlete's' & that 'we will be back in 48 hours with trampolines', unfortunately this is about as 'funny' as Love at First Bite gets.
As an actress/dancer in training, I found this movie to be what so many others have adequately dubbed it: a poorly made film with glaring stereotypes.
Most Hollywood dance movies are very poorly done, simply because they rarely cast anyone with the requisite
training
to make the dancing sequences enjoyable, believable, or even worth watching.
Ballet is not something you can pick up in 6 months of intense
training.
Prior to watching the movie, I looked up the lead actress, and was delighted to find she actually has had classic dance
training.
And the stupid plot involves a couple of cheerleading outcasts
training
a ragtag team of students (who know NOTHING about cheerleading) in a limited amount of time!
I am a musician with 18 years of
training
and currently still finishing my
training
on the collegiate level.
Let's start with an irrelevant montage of karate
training
that consists entirely of fresh-air punches and kicks.
The cover on the DVD bears no resemblance to the movie, which is much worse, but let's cut to a montage of the same karate
training
with crappy music.
Oh yea, did I mention a bunch of inmates are trapped with a super hot little Latina cop babe with a white tank-top who's having her first day in
training
at a prison, and they aren't even remotely suggesting raping her or anything other than dragging up her past to suggest she doesn't have what it takes to "command" them or be in charge.
A normal horse, without special
training
would have injured/run away from these children.
Worse, she is barely a witch, because there is no training, no finding of a new skill, barely any discussion of other witches, nada.
i don't know where these Russian directors get their
training
but i can tell you that any American or English director would have done a much better job. in reading some of the other reviews i felt that i was living on another planet.
The first 'Troll' is hardly a masterpiece, but unlike this film it was made by a competent director with a cast that actually had
training.
The underlying arson plot was not developed fully, the dog's skills were not believable (how does a dog learn agility
training
in or learn to be a rescue dog in a day?), and the poor editing with the boom all over the film and over actor's heads and the top visor on the camera showing were all it took to make the film a waste of time and money for the whole family.
it was ,however, extremely disappointing because after all those years of grueling
training
montages and hard work, Rocko loses all of his money because of Paulie's ridiculous gambling habits.
These actors had to eat, support families, and it was
training
ground for some later great work.
Soap opera starring Barbara Stanwyck as Lora Hart, nurse in
training
who rooms and works at a big hospital under a stern head nurse, a real stickler for the rules who punishes nurses who stay out past curfew by putting them on night shift in the emergency ward.
Let me preface this by saying that I am definitely a fan of Bale's previous work- particularly American Psycho, and I thought
training
day was awesome.
However, the
training
sequences with Billy Drago offer little of anything new, and Drago himself is wasted in an untraditional good guy role.
This film should be used as a
training
film for wannabe actors.
The acting of the Dog, played by Bibo, was stunning, especially when you know that she has received NO formal
training
whatsoever (and she did indeed act, not react!).
The screenwriters should had based their story more on "Falcons of France," written by Charles Nordoff and James Norman Hall (famous later for writing Mutiny on the Bounty), about their experiences
training
and then flying for the French in the famous Lafayette Escadrille.
Having grown up idolising the great man and having seen all his movies countless times, when I first saw the "Curse of the Dragon" documentary I was most intrigued by an interview which was conducted with Bruce's long time friend, colleague and
training
partner Dan Inosanto where Bruce's original concept for "Game of Death" was brought to light.
One bright spot is Jeffrey Meek who appears to have some
training
in martial arts and tries to fill the character but lacks Fred Ward's on the money Remo, wisecracks and all.
The
training
sequences are long, obnoxious and downright painful.
With a fortnight's
training.
After some martial arts training, she and her newfound karate cohorts decide to bring their own brand of justice to these hoodlums since the police won't do anything about them.
The
training
sequence, a staple of the "fighting tournament" B-movie, is a perfect microcosm of how the movie is as a whole; shabby, questionable in logic and technique, sparse in action and intelligence, heavy on clichés, and despite the possible enjoyment one could get from how bad it is, simply uninteresting.
I couldn't believe it was made in 1978 because I felt it probably was one of the
training
films made by new actors and actresses in order to develop their craft for Mia and Rock.
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