Treatment
in sentence
2329 examples of Treatment in a sentence
While "Zelig" has its moments, it is ultimately tedious, running about twice as long as it's one-note gag
treatment
can sustain.
Alas, we have yet to see a really good
treatment
of any Lovecraftian tale on film.
The dialog begs for a MST3K
treatment.
It resembles to cannibal apocalypse (another ridiculous movie)in the sense of its
treatment
and cheap thrills.
The representative (hero-boy) immediately and constantly antagonizes and confronts the photographer because of the harsh
treatment
of the girls.
After his epic B&W western "Union Pacific", DeMille had the clout to insist all his future works be filmed in Technocolor, a rare luxury
treatment
in the '40s.
The movie does a good job of establishing the mystery surrounding the girls and the seeming conspiracy by the nuns to cover up the one sister's past and prevent her from receiving medical
treatment
that might save her life.
Back on the mainland she is taken to hospital for
treatment.
It also led me to learn that the Brits were years ahead of Hollywood in the
treatment
of gay characters in movies, and I now count "Who Killed Sister George?" and "The Leather Boys" as other personal favorites.
So shallow and brief is the
treatment
of each treasure here that if you blink, you will miss one or two -- but, sadly, you will not escape the whittering of the truly appalling Dan Cruikshank whose confidence in his own narrow and banal "Little England" aesthetic judgements is such that he needs no actual expertise in casting his pearls before us.
Damp, peculiar
treatment
doesn't raise chills so much as it does simple confusion.
Wadleigh shows a deep empathy for the men and women in charge of the festival (although you can still take him to task for his dishonorable
treatment
of some of the foot soldiers, most notably the Port-O-San man) as well as the townsfolk of Woodstock, New York; and he shows just as much passion for the music.
And, the light, sometimes sarcastic,
treatment
is appreciated.
Long-time fans of the original GREY GARDENS documentary were probably pleased that this "movie
" treatment
of the subject would fill in some gaps in the back story of these two unique denizens of Eastern society -- "How did they get to this?" is the question that always comes to mind when watching the Maysles Brothers' astonishing 1975 chronicle.
Yes, this
treatment
of the different class systems seems rather trite at first, but the complexities of the characters are mapped through until the sombre end, which is a refreshing change from the feel-good nonsense made by Disney et al.
I don't think we will ever get to the bottom of what went on at 60 Minutes, with respect to the
treatment
of the Jeffrey Wigand interview.
Instead, we get a superficial treatment, with flying in the fight sequences that ignore the laws of gravity and physics, and most amazing, all the German pilots are in Fokker D1 triplane, a type of aircraft not introduced to the war until April, 1917, and most of these planes are depicted in red paint, the color used nearly exclusively by Baron Manfred von Richthofen!
A twist ending at the tail end of the picture does much to mitigate some of the silliness and illogic that had come before, and even becomes very P.C. in its
treatment
of the overweight Saloma.
What a crashing bore of a movie on a topic that deserved a much better
treatment.
The grieving Sara has a nervous breakdown and is interned in the Headway Nursing Home for
treatment.
I of course saw this movie through the show, and I thought their
treatment
of it was hilarious.
It also explained some of the usually unmentioned
treatment
of prisoners of war at the hands of the Japanese.
One who has read and appreciated the book on all of its many levels will also miss its many memorable and important "minor" characters; its sensitive and sympathetic
treatment
of Buddhism and other non-Christian creeds; and will be left wondering whether it was the star, the writers, the producer, the director or some combination of the above who thought they could go Kipling one better by, among other things, replacing his almost-accidental crisis with a Flynn-caused avalanche, then neatly tying all his lifelike loose ends into a big Tinseltown bow.
Maggie needs a lot of money to pay for the
treatment
the boy needs, which can only be found in Australia.
Also having sold of the family silver and home some time previously there is very little in the kitty to pay for the
treatment
he needs.
The successful children's writer Claire Holloway (Gabrielle Anwar) is troubled by scary nightmares and is under psychological
treatment.
It's one of those true compelling 20th century stories, and the filmmaker Philip Kaufman cares about all of these real guys so much that it moves right over into the cinematic
treatment
of the characters.
Carl Reiner's 1982 pastiche on 1940's film noir has never received its due as a genuinely clever, often hilarious salute to a genre that is ripe for satirical
treatment.
Captain America deserves a better treatment, but what's done is done...
The rise of Islamic fundamentalism, homosexuality, the poor
treatment
of women in contemporary Egyptian society, the rampant corruption, still powerful strict class system.
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