Villain
in sentence
788 examples of Villain in a sentence
Also having a drug dealing, cursing kid as a
villain
is just a little too much.
To quote the kid who plays the
villain "
It sucks"
There are so many logical errors in this show it's barely worth me stating. 1) Mystic Gohan is non existent 2) Uub is as powerful as MAJIN BUU yet plays absolutely no role in the show, somehow he is easily overpowered by every bad guy 3) The whole Super Saiyan 4 idea is retarded and it's appalling that he loses to super 17 (which is the worst idea for a DB
villain
EVER) 4) Super Saiyan 4 Goku is no match for Super 17 but non transformed Goku using a move he learned in a movie that wasn't supposed to happen, kills him with ease 5) Vegeta is utterly useless 6) No character other than Goku has any impact to the outcome of the battles 7) The series ends with a spirit bomb...come on 8) Goku invincible?
Despite virtually non-stop action, the film is utterly clichéd and unintentionally funny - with a campy villain, to boot, in Christopher George.
I was able to predict EVERYTHING - who the
villain
was, who the girl was, (SPOILER ALERT) who the good-guy-turned-bad-guy was, etc.
A low-rent, cheaply made police thriller that's kept bearable by some fair humorous bits, the nice chemistry between the two leads and, especially, by James Remar's satisfying turn as a narcissistic, psychopathic (and, naturally, indestructible)
villain.
I'll make this summary short & sweet: mix "Dude Where's My Car" (about a good 1/2 of the film) with a very watered down "Hitcher", add a redneck version of the antagonist from "I Madman" as the primary
villain
& finally some incoherent black magic mumbo jumbo & you'll kind of get a clue how rotten this movie is.
Jimmy Caan plays a nifty
villain
but he's always had that redneck edge at the ready.
The strongest and most eloquent point this film made was that because of man's fallen nature each of us is a potential
villain
in the stream of life, each of us has evil within us that we must fight with the help of God.
Unfortunately, they are not familiar with the film resume of William Smith, who plays Caribe; otherwise, they would have known immediately he is the
villain
of the piece.
The setting is the Civil War and Prospero's (here Guideon's) evil brother looks like an 1890's melodrama villain, complete with Snidely Whiplash moustache.
Not to mention, the Reincarnated snake guy or
villain
has some kind of super powers.
(They destroy the
villain
with hair driers--but where are they plugged in?) It's a unique film though, and I enjoyed the acting of Courtney Draper and Tamara Hope.
You have a heroine who isn't very likable and is killed not far into the movie and a
villain
who is creepy, but makes you feel for him.
One can accept all theses and other inconsistencies for the sake of a good yarn, however what spoiled the movie for me was when what appears to have been an effort by the script writers to discuses what up to that point was a fairly predictable ending, they killed off the two hero's (If one can refer to crocks as hero's) Ketchum & Brooks one was shot and thrown out of a 747 at 10,000 feet the other wiliest sliding down the cable between the two planes the
villain
Daltry with one hand manages to unhook the cable carrying the weight of a full grown man with the air pressure of several hundred miles per hour pressing on him, and letting him fall to his death.
"The Evil That Men Do" begins with a truly repellent torture scene, followed, a little later, by graphic verbal descriptions of equally repellent torture methods that the sadistic, heartless
villain
likes to use.
Wings plays the hero, and his real-life son is the
villain.
You really don't care what happened to them... Third, the
villain
is very easy to identify.
However the movie was ruined by the horrible miscasting of Robert Redford as the
villain
who offers $1,000,000 to sleep with Demi Moore.
Cut to the next scene where she tells the
villain "
I've told you everything about myself , tell me about your life ?
This wonderfully overplayed
villain
has a certain...oh, Shakespearean presence that made this movie bearable (hence the 2).
Sure, the acting was flat, there was no plot, and the
villain
was the lamest that i've seen.
At it's core, this is a fairly typical revenge Western, heavy on the spaghetti, and if you follow it as such, the protagonist comes through successfully defeating the main
villain.
I feel that either they needed to cast someone who looked more villain-like (Michael Bermardo's big brown doe eyes don't exactly strike fear in the hearts of well.. anyone except for maybe casting directors who consistently cast him as either a
villain
or a heroic 'bad boy'.)
Walter Pidgeon is a truly unconvincing hero and even moreso when he tries to go "undercover" as a
villain
who, we're meant to believe, drinks too much and knocks his wife about a bit.
Something that this sort of film really needs is a resoundingly nasty lead character; and while Terror Express offers up three potential candidates, not one of them steps up and becomes this villain, leaving the lacking in the most important area.
The boot blacked midget from the Andoman islands looked as though he could not fight his way out of a paper bag and what the
villain
was doing taking tea in Baker Street for a denouement was beyond anything that the old Scotland Yard could ever have dreamed up.
He takes orders from a puffy faced angel of death, who you might recognize as the puffy faced
villain
from Tango & Cash and as the puffy faced cyborg from Future War.
George Murdock, is terrible as the main villain, and very unconvincing.
You have the usual Nazi holdover or neo-Nazi whatever the heck we are supposed to think, type villain, who's son of course is gay, German accents...get the picture?
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