Whose
in sentence
6259 examples of Whose in a sentence
"Dead Man Walking" is a film not about the death penalty, but about the people involved in a death penalty case -- the killer, the families
whose
kids were killed, the nun who becomes his spiritual advisor, and what happens.
Of course, this film established Jennifer Grey
whose
biggest role to date was the resentful sister in Ferris Beuller's Day Off.
Dirty Dancing may not be the greatest film ever made in the history but its universal appeal still draws crowds and repeated watchers like the 800 club
whose
members have watched it so many times.
I looked it up on IMDb which led me to reading Meg's bio which mentioned and reminded me of Meg's sister Jennifer Tilly
whose
filmography included "Key West", which was one of my wife's and my favorite shows.
Renee Zellweger is a Kansas housewife
whose
domineering husband is mixed up in drug trafficking.
The main actor is really realistic in representing the painter
(whose
paintings are astonishing).
It's great to see a film maker
whose
work clearly isn't interfeared with by the powers that be.
Alan Bates plays Bri, a schoolteacher
whose
daughter is almost completely brindled.
The remake loses the most interesting of the three plot threads, that of a farmer
whose
meager livelihood depends on drugs as a paying cash crop and
whose
increased involvement with the drug trade in an effort to better himself destroys himself and his family.
Jack Webb is riveting as a Marine Corp drill instructor in the D.I.. Webb play Sgt.Jim Moore, a tough but fair Marine
whose
job it is to prepare young teens for possible combat.
Kudos also should be doled out to Jane Lincoln Taylor --
whose
Mother provides the right amount of tragic historic weight -- and Justin Parkinson --
whose
shy first-time John, Sam, provides one of the sweetest, if not most awkward, sex scenes in film.
Not a bad movie at all, if you can look past the lousy acting and enjoy the hokey effects - the most laughable being the guy
whose
hands are eaten off and he is left with only plastic looking skeletal fingers... Pretty dreamlike tone to it, too, coming across as very surreal and aberrant - mainly the whole thing involving the artist behind the painting and the demonic back story of the bed.
This is the last film of a trilogy by the brilliant Turkish director, Nuri Bilge Ceylan,
whose
last film Mayis Sikintisi -which was very Cehovian- was shown in prestigious film festivals.
In his relation to his relative, we see him first as caring and tolerant, however, when he could not find a job, our suburbian character starts to be disturbed for sharing his private 'space' with someone
whose
leaving date becomes ambiguous.
Wonderful acting from actors
whose
names meant nothing to me then (although I will never forget the achingly young Sean Connery as Hotspur), but do now!
In BLUE, Juliette Binoche played a grieving widow
whose
plan to live her life without connections to the past had her meet someone unexpected.
Shapiro,
whose
last film was improbably "The Crush", shows himself once again to be an extremely talented -- and versatile -- filmmaker.
Both are superb, especially the under-rated Lupino
whose
initial independence and self-control soon crumble before Ryan's unhinged intruder.
Joey Lauren Adams delivers her typically solid performance as the well-intentioned mother, but the star of the show is 12-year-old EMMA ROBERTS,
whose
on-camera presence is a glowing as that of her famous aunt, JULIA.
This 3 hour epic (seems much shorter) explores the will to power and conquest and the conflicting motives that underlie that quest by tracking two parallel lives: the emperor Q'in,
whose
desire to unify the Chinese feudal states has its basis in noble aims but devolves into violent oppression,isolation, and ultimate powerlessness; and the assassin Jing ke, a mercenary killer who comes to recognize the unintended consequences of murder and finds a form of salvation.
Along the way, they run into a medicine man
whose
mules ran away, a group of bank robbers, and some Navajos.
The social criticism of our shallow, commercially oriented values is what makes this film an exceptional vision of the "war is hell" cliché, underscored by a mythical journey upriver to Cambodia by a special forces captain
whose
mission is to eliminate (with extreme prejudice) a rogue colonel, who's left behind the army's concepts of justice to create his own world.
The story of Emily Waters, once a girl from a broken home,
whose
only means of escape from an abusive father was through her sketchbook.
It features former partners Randolph Scott and Glenn Ford
whose
friendship is strong despite the fact that Ford's Cheyenne Rogers has been part of bank robbing(he even steals Scott's Sheriff Steve Upton's horse without knowing it his good friend for which he is thieving).
Salvatore, a middle-aged man who hopes for a more fruitful life, persuades his family to leave their homeland behind in Sicily, take the arduous journey across the raging seas, and inhabit a land
whose
rivers supposedly flow with milk.
Special kudos are in order for foxy brunette actress Paola D'Egidio,
whose
lusty and uninhibited portrayal of depraved and lascivious wicked bitch Rhonda positively burns up the screen.
You knew who was on
whose
side, etc.
The much missed Richard Jordan plays 'pinky' an Ex-pat American,
whose
Just been released from prison,he finds himself A job as an Electrician in a bank, it all goes well until he finds Himself Embroiled in a bank heist with his ex cronies, David Niven Plays the mastermind Ivan, Its an enjoyable little romp, hopefully studio canal or anchor bay, will come to the Rescue.
This is deep movie, a pondering of modern life and the way we think, and can provoke a study into the man
whose
thoughts (and other who used him) have certainly affected our lives.
The character Michael "Linnett" Connors is Mack Sennett,
whose
real name was Michael Sinnott.
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