Western
in sentence
4718 examples of Western in a sentence
This is a great
Western
story with outstanding veteran actors who made this film great entertainment to view and enjoy.
This small John Ford
western
with no 'stars' but a cast of character actors is one of his masterpieces.
There Is plenty of action In this
western
that Is quite Impressive, the scenery Is delicious and the letterbox scope photography Is breath taking and the soundtrack Is stereo!
I would say that this
western
had a size-able budget It looks expensive.
This is a great film in many different ways...perhaps the most important is that it introduces
Western
audiences to the remarkable, tragic story of Aung San Suu Kyi and her fight for freedom and democracy.
And,besides all that,this documentary is flat-out rock-n-roll F U N !! Do Not Miss It!!! that said,can anyone tell me when,if ever, "the decline of
western
civilization"...part 1,( Not part 2,the metal version) will be made available again..hopefully on DVD?
This is not an A western, not enough people and budget.
"A Minute to Pray, A Second to Die" is a quality spaghetti
western
with a solid cast and an interesting storyline.
Indeed, while attempting to create their own
"Western"
(i.e.
Burt Kennedy both wrote & directed this
western
taken from a novel.
This is probably the most underrated major
western
at the moment, but I have always appreciated its heroes as result- getting hard-workers.
Having majored in
Western
History when I was a student in college seeing the views on World War II are quite discomforting and in a whole completely wrong.
This movie maybe a major disappointment for many Spaghetti
Western
fans but not for many Klaus Kisnki fans.
This show was a really good one in many ways, although certainly an atypical
Western
with the hero (?) riding around on a motorcycle rather than a horse, due to the 1914 setting, very "late" for a Western, which tend usually to be set between 1866 and 1890.
Of course, by the time this show was made the
"Western
era" of TV had been in decline for around a decade; someday I hope to be able to write that the "reality era" has been in decline for that long!
The interactions between the Indian taxi driver and the french tourist are a good reflection on the fundamental differences between Eastern and
Western
life styles and philosophy.
A widely unknown strange little
western
with mindblowing colours (probably the same material as it was used in "Johnny Guitar", I guess "Trucolor" or something, which makes blood drips look like shining rubies), nearly surrealistic scenes with twisted action and characters.
Something different, far from being a masterpiece, but there should be paid more attention to this little gem in
western
encyclopedias.
What's really strange is that towards the end of the movie it turns into like a 5 minute western, and at the end, the twists, of which their were several, don't make sense with the rest of the movie.
Gritty, dusty
western
from director Richard Brooks, who seems thoroughly engrossed in the genre while keeping all the usual clichés intact.
This movie tries to be
western
flavored, it's not.
I admired Rob Marshall for Chicago, but Memoirs of Geisha turns out to be yet another failure of combing
western
and Asian arts.
This is meant to crack into the
Western
market just as CTHD did.
By 1976 the
western
was an exhausted genre and the makers of this film clearly knew it.
If the term itself were not geographically and semantically meaningless, one might well refer to "Ned Kelly" as an "Australian Western."
This early John Wayne Lone Star
western
has a bit more going for it than the run-of-the-mill oaters Wayne had been making for Lone Star up until that time.
The plot, about mistaken identity, payroll robbery and murder, is as trite and perfunctory as you'd expect it to be in a 1930s low-budget western, but Wayne's strapping good looks, easygoing charm and way with a line go a long way to making this more enjoyable.
Being a big fan of Corman's horror movies I expected from his
western
a bit more than I got.
However, I found the combination of the glacially slow 'plot' and the general filming style so impersonal as to be totally alienating, particularly to a
western
audience.
But "the last great American
Western"
, a phrase I saw applied to it more than once?
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