Version
in sentence
3983 examples of Version in a sentence
Mario Van Peebles tries to go the Jean-Claude Van Damme route and play a renegade robotic soldier who goes AWOL to preserve himself, however the government isn't going to take this lying down, so among the simplistic plot Van Peebles protects villagers from the rebel forces and defeats a improved
version
of himself in this disappointing film.
On the other hand the movie does sort of resemble a competent
version
of R.O.T.O.R although where as that abysmal bad movie was hilarious, this one only yields occasional laughter in its laughably unconvincing action sequences.
GREAT book / GOOD Film
version
from Fred Zinneman, yet this film is AWFUL!
But either the
version
I saw on DVD was edited with a weed-whacker, or the screenplay itself is the lowest level of grind-house/blaxploitation sausage.
Laughable dubbing of the original Italian language in the
version
I watched with ridiculous ending where the attempt is made to give an anti-slave statement(or should I say one line).
However, it was very clear to me from the beginning that Martha Stewart's
version
of "The Apprentice" just doesn't "fit in."
I saw the MST3K
version
of this film and it is a bad movie - but its not nearly as bad as its low IMDB rating (currently 1.8 out of 10).
When George Sluizer was told he could direct an American
version
of the book "Het Gouden Ei"/the movie "Spoorloos"(outside Holland, this movie has the name "the Vanishing" too), he was told that this would only go through if the ending was changed - He was told that 'the American Audience' wouldn't approve the original ending.
This COULD be due to the fact that the pacing of the project is way too rushed(as noted in previous postings)- this film clocks in 45 minutes shorter than the film version- the difference owing to the pauses for dramatic effect, which apparently is necessary to propagate the appropriate MOOD for the story.
This is NOT mandatory viewing, especially for youngsters learning about Anne Frank for the first time- stick to the original film version, and or even better, the TV production of ANNE FRANK: THE TRUE STORY starring Ben Kingsley, which is the CLOSEST thing to capturing the heartbreak and reality of Anne's situation ever filmed!
Not to mention the creepy kids who remind me of the dollar store
version
of every other group of creepy kids in movies.
Ordinarily, I wouldn't waste the time on reviewing a film like "Human Pork Chop" (the 2001 version, not to be confused with the earlier film of the same title, which is probably better known in the West as "The Untold Story"), but since the reviews already here are quite vague as to what it actually consists of, I figured I'd best post something more detailed, so as no one actually gets tempted (as I was) into buying it because of the film's mystique.
I'm not aware of a really good rendering of the story, however - the best effort being Orson Welles's vigorous shoestring
version.
Then the villains (spare me), first we have a monkey with part of his (little) brain showing, then we have a (gay)
version
of the devil, a pink hillbilly, a gang green gang (whit is ironic, that's their name) a spoiled princess (once again, ironic, that's 'her' name) among others.
The name carries over from a 70s' multi star cast, which the 2002
version
also boasts of.
Problems: 1) Although billed as "a loving tribute to Poverty Row," a lot of the old footage is not even from Poverty Row films-- much of it is from RKO's "The Most Dangerous Game," (1932), with some from the silent (!?)
version
of "The Lost World" (1926)!
Sure I'll admit that I also mistakenly picked this up thinking it was the Spielberg
version.
This is basically a Nineties
version
of 'Commando'.
NOTE: The
version
I watched was a TV version, pan & scan.
The Alpha Video
version
I saw for this review was heavily edited, and one wonders cow much nekkid people were chopped out, not that it would have improved the film much.
This
version
played like a condensed, dumbed down Reader's Digest movie.
In summation, I managed to see the unrated
version
on DVD, and can't imagine having to sit all the way through the previously only available R rated version, because the make-up FX and gore were the only thing I got out of it.
The 1999
version
is much more fun but terribly incomplete.
If they could redo this
version
with a better suited actress for Fanny it would be fabulous!
But failed miserably in this
version
as even Cherie Lunghi was a pale imitation of what she was to become - so much so that I suspected that she must turn out to be an accomplice right to the end.
The MST
version
was funny though.
It turned out to be the "uncut
version"
whatever that means.
This movie presents an idealized
version
of Gurdjieff's own largely fictional and fantastic account of his formation and "awakening" (which I would rather describe as his discovery of how much he could sway the minds and wills of certain types of sadly disoriented people).
Was the script for the 1986
version
of "Breeders" so inspiring that these producers felt it had to be done again and this time done correctly?
A more interesting
version
would be someone going near an active volcano and filming it, and would probably cost about £20 to make.
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