Whose
in sentence
6259 examples of Whose in a sentence
It is made to cater for the multitude of zombies
whose
meaning in life derives from watching celebrity names.
First up is Jess Browning (Beth Gondek)
whose
death is put down to a suicide, Mary Lou begins to posses Vicki's body as the night of the prom draws nearer.
Jeffrey Combs is an insane scientist
whose
stem cell research has morphed into a diabolical scheme to create a hybrid hammerhead shark humanoid life form, hoping to breed a brand new species using Hunter Tylo's womb.
Anyone
whose
read a few of my reviews can see that I'm pretty easy to please.
Notable exceptions were Bernard Hill and Anne Reid, old stagers
whose
diction was exemplary.
We are asked to accept not only that a record played backwards can bring a dead man back to life, but that the record also contains hidden messages aimed SPECIFICALLY at one kid, when the singer had no connection to the boy when he was alive, and of course no way of knowing at
whose
hands the record would end up.
Although there's a lot of talk about "energy," that quality is decidedly missing from the motley cast
whose
numbers include Thomas Kretschmann, Annabeth Gish, Hector Elizondo and Jurgen Prochnow, all of whom are now firmly ensconced in the camp pantheon.
Becky Harris plays the female shopper
whose
misfortune it is to be in the store at the wrong time and obviously ONLY purpose to be in this film is to supply a reason to wear out remote controls!
Soon the cyborg will be blasting away with her arm laser burning one innocent alcoholic Doctor(Robert Quarry of Count Yorga-Vampire fame)proving that no one will stand in it's way of retrieving the hide of the convict,
whose
collar is a tracking device that weakens his body.
A lot of other reviewers here, including many
whose
opinions I respect, hold this slice of European sleaze horror in high regard.
One would hope that the presence of so many marvelous actors - Danny Glover, Alfre Woodard, Kevin Kline, Mary Louise Parker - would help make up for the presences of Mary McDonnell
(whose
penance is to watch her own films for all eternity)... But, no.
The plantation is under the spell of owner Peter Finch's late father
whose
ghost casts a pall over Elephant Walk that becomes a major point of contention between Taylor and Finch.
Veteran director and producer Allan Dwan,
whose
huge string of films includes both the utterly forgettable and the recurrently shown (for example, John Wayne in "Sands of Iwo Jima") tried his hand at a big musical with "I Dream of Jeanie."
It's the kind of film
whose
central conflict could be instantly resolved if the characters concerned simply sat down and had a chat.
No one involved escapes unharmed: Bruce Greenwood actually seems pained to be on-screen, though poor Jeanne Tripplehorn seems to carry herself as if she's actually in something good, which had me thinking all the while, "Denial ain't just a river in Egypt!" Adriano Giannini, son of Giancarlo Giannini, star of the Italian original, "Swept Away...", is, like his father before him, immensely attractive, and isn't altogether bad (despite winning a Razzie nomination for "Worst Actor"), but, like almost everything else about this production, it all comes back to Madonna, on
whose
shoulders rest the blame.
A film like this, an "Odd Couple"-ish, war of the classes, should be light and fun, with leads who can bounce off one another with witty, even romantic, dialogue, for what else can a film
whose
plot involves two disparate people stranded, really be? Honestly, I don't think anyone involved knew exactly the tone they were trying for; it succeeds neither as comedy (I defy you to laugh even once) or romance (Madonna's ice-princess routine precludes ANY chemistry).
A movie should have been made focusing on the accomplishments these men did for themselves, the Navy and for their country and not making a movie
whose
focus is racism during WWII.
He always seems to find shutting that unbearably grating pie-hole of his very difficult in this one and
whose
clock face should really have been used for turning back in time to the unforgettable two film in this series!
Cameron Diaz is a woman who is married to a judge, played by Harvey Keitel,
whose
life is fine until an ex shows up and things get a little complicated..
The length of Cave's performance makes you even more eager to see more of Cohen
whose
wit and well spoken words have already tickled your fancy.
The radical Smurfs were happy to get the guidance of a wise old man with gray hair who regularly preys to the God of all long-haired Smurfs, Lenin the Communist - another wise old man
whose
beard made the Smurfs take him even more seriously, for it symbolized something wise, though they did not quite know why they regarded the beard to have this kind of deep effect on them.
Once upon a time some evil people made a movie about a guy that got shot into space, supposedly to go to Saturn, but really only to some stock footage of solar flares, and then he gets a nose bleed, and before you know it, he's laying in a hospital bandaged head to foot, and then an overweight nurse with an ill-fitting uniform comes in and gets eaten by the guy,
whose
supposed to be melting all over the place but never seems to lose any mass, and then NASA, or at least one guy at NASA, gets upset about it and calls one other guy in to hunt him down, but the guy they sent to hunt the melting guy has to go home and have soup first, and his oddly-shaped wife forgot the crackers, so he can't have crackers, and then he has to go out and look for the melting guy with a geiger counter, and that doesn't really work, so he really only follows the trail of half-eaten corpses, and then there's something about a sheriff, and two ugly old people in a lemon grove, and a women with a meat cleaver, and some kind of industrial plant with trigger-happy security guards, and since I can't tell you how the movies ends, all I can say is Jonathan Demme is in it somewhere with some guy with the stupid name of Burr DeBenning, and if there's any justice in the world everyone connected with this movie died a hideous, violent death and was unable to make more movies, and the world lived HAPPILY EVER AFTER - THE END!
The movie is horrendously inaccurate, more laughably, even, than "Gladiator" (which is at least a well-written script
whose
historical errors are articulate and correspond well to the story).
Research chemist Rich Stevens (Mark Sawyer),
whose
eyes were destroyed when acid flew into his face during a lab explosion, is the unlucky recipient of the werewolf's eyeballs.
"The Brain" has troublesome teenager Jim Majelewski getting put into a treatment
whose
leader turns out to be a cult leader aided by a big ugly "brain".
And as if that is not bad enough, she gets involved with both her schoolmate Avigdor (Mandy Patinkin,
whose
best moment is the shot of his naked rear end) AND his fiancée (Amy Irving, who does her usual sleepwalker routine, a bit of schtick the poor woman always resorts to when the director ignores her and she does not know what she is doing).
A repressed housewife (an annoying lisping Angie Dickinson,
whose
body double treats/horrifies us with an extreme closeup of her delicates) is sexually bored by her husband and decides to branch-out.
The older men are opinionated, right-wing Thatcherites
whose
behavior brings back all the acrimony of the Reagan/Thatcher years.
Visually contrived with painful attempts to create beautiful hip indie cinematography, the whole film feels like the director -
whose
previous effort Dodgeball was funny if outright commercial - is desperately seeking indie credibility by cobbling together aspects of other indie films but sprinkling it with stars like Mena Suvari, Sienna Miller and Nick Nolte.
Protocol is an implausible movie
whose
only saving grace is that it stars Goldie Hawn along with a good cast of supporting actors.
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