Visual
in sentence
1130 examples of Visual in a sentence
LeRoy's direction is full of innovative
visual
touches but he cannot overcome the bad acting and the unintentionally funny situations.
As said before, the
visual
effects are stunning.
His strong
visual
sense is, as usual, undone by the appalling half baked acting of most of the cast.
The cast is made up of attractive looking actors smiling glumly at one another, and the music and photography are lugubrious (a couple of the
visual
effects are laughable, indie-cliché touches that reek of a puny budget).
Usually I have no problem with science fiction that is mostly dialog driven as opposed to a
visual
bonanza of special effects.
Thread bare plot, bad acting, bad
visual
effects.
One previous reviewer called this film "pure
visual
joy" I am wondering if s/he saw the same film that I did.
It was nominated for the Oscar for Best
Visual
Effects.
Verhoeven has a nice
visual
flair but resorts to scenes of wild hallucinations, overt symbolism, and gratuitous gore when he runs out of ideas.
I was very excited about seeing this film, anticipating a
visual
excursus on the relation of artistic beauty and nature, containing the kinds of wisdom the likes of "Rivers and Tides."
Additional, the
visual
effects to show the energy of all living things and the elucidation of the events at the end were parsimonious!
Robert Altman might have breathed life into these unlikeable characters and made them interesting, but Brian De Palma, for all of his
visual
sophistication, has never had an eye for the nuances of the human experience.
Very hard to follow at the start of the movie I actually found myself fighting the urge to turn it off the biggest problem from a
visual
aspect is the fact that the camera work is simply over the top with so many "arty" splicings and semi-subliminal cuts throughout the movie that actually distracts you from the from the overall story.
Everyone is much more interested in the
visual
aesthetic of the shot.
However, something positive in this was the
visual
effects (dragons were beautiful), but some of the information in this mockumentary was totally fake, and that is really disappointing because it was coming from scientists, so that is the reason why it deserves a 1 of 10 and not a 0. An example of false information would be the hydrogen idea: It is true that, according to Chemystry, the hydrogen is produced in the stomach but it is impossible to be produced in that proportions, so in that case, you need a good explanation of what really happens in a dragon stomach.
Instantly dated
visual
effects and crummy dialogue abound in this cheesy lamer, which did nothing but make me pine for the days of 'The Incredible Shrinking Man', when this kind of thing was done properly.
There was very little plot and the deeper interesting areas that were touched upon i.e. what Jesus may really have wanted us to know, were glossed over and instead we were given heavy
visual
doses of sadistic punishment inflicted upon our heroine (Arquette).
The
visual
look - including the animation - gave a wonderfully unnerving air to the piece.
However this was quality of unease was lost amongst the overblown imagery, both
visual
and in the script, that you were practically hammered over the head with.
Everything but meaning, wit,
visual
style, and interesting subject matter.
Some scenes seemed promising, playing with
visual
dimensions, but couldn't hold up the rest.
A
visual
treat to the eye, the film fails to stimulate the mind and heart.
There are some neat
visual
effects and some interesting ideas floating around in the dialogue but the film still drags badly.
When I first heard news of a remake of Robert Wise's 1963 film, "The Haunting", I had a fear that it would be ruined by an abundance of summer-movie sized
visual
effects.
No, we get some
visual
effects to SHOW US what we're supposed to be afraid of...and you know what?
As wonderfully realized as they are...the
visual
effects come off as sort of silly.
Other than the brief recitation of lines from the end of James Joyce's "Ulysses", and an interesting
visual
reference to the end of Ingmar Bergman's "The Seventh Seal," I found it a poor attempt to meld symbolic elements and moods immortalized in films like "Last Year at Marianbad" and "Un Chien Andalou."
Cannon pulled off a real
visual
beauty of a medieval epic that appears fascinating (except for the dragon prop).
The
visual
effects were good but what good are they if there are no characters that you connect with or a story line that is interesting.
Sure he has one of the more unique voices in Hollywood, but it works only as a part of a bigger
visual
package.
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