Whose
in sentence
6259 examples of Whose in a sentence
I related more to him than Keaton,
whose
wild antics and personality are fun and not too over-the-top.
With a modicum of witty repartee, some excellent carnival locations, and an unusual villain (a master spy
whose
cover is playing a sideshow mechanical man), this one might have ascended from third to second rate, were it not for Morris's acting (mostly a matter of flashing a grin that looks too wide for his face) and his hat (its too-small brim accentuates his big square face and makes him look stupid amongst all the elegant, wide-brimmed hats worn by everybody else, even the weaselly villains).
Then there is Catherine Zeta Jones, a red-hot newcomer
whose
luscious figure would make any man want to watch.
Hickok was a brilliant cinematographer
whose
career began in the silents and he would go on to shoot such films as The Big Sleep, Dark Passage, To Have and Have Not, A slight Case of Murder, Gentleman Jim and the sci-fi classic Them.
She is not even a C rated actress
whose
limited looks can even help her!
Perhaps the most cruel cinematic comparison, however, brought to obvious attention by the prominent presence of a decrepit snack van, is with Mike Leigh's 'Life is Sweet', a film
whose
originality and desperate humour make a stark contrast with the dull clichéd Oirishisms on display here.
He's neither a wimp nor a man of intellect but someone
whose
basic humanity emanates.
He's a sex obsessed, lewd, crude and tedious little brat
whose
every word makes you want to reach into the movie and smack him in the face.
Their voice casting choices were fine, especially Richard Boone,
whose
cancer-rasped voice brought the dragon Smaug to life, and Theodore as the creepy and loathsome Gollum, who evoked fear and disgust but little pity.
By the time she arrives, she meets a young Latin boy, Nicky (Jean-Luke Figueroa),
whose
family Gloria's lover has had killed.
Dustin Hoffman accomplished another great role as political comedian Lenny Bruce,
whose
comments always irked the establishment.
Sorcha Cusack is wonderful as Jane - exactly what Charlotte Bronte set out to create, a plain, retiring heroine
whose
personality blazes through and captivates us.
I would recommend this movie to all people of all ages,
whose
hearts are still alive and able to sympathize.
Of all the actors, the one who deserves the biggest round of Bronx cheers is Borgnine,
whose
performance is utterly awful--particularly when he, believe it or not, transforms into a ram-man late in the film.
Taking place mostly at a small apartment building in downtown Manhattan
whose
inhabitants must deal with murderous rats, as well as the zombie rat-people that those they bite devolve into.
This tale of fussin' and a feudin' is showing its age in spades, but at least it benefits from a memorable cast: Randolph Scott, Buster Crabbe, John Carradine, and little Shirley Temple,
whose
doll gets its head shot off.
The saddest part of the movie was supposed to be the death of one student
whose
dad would't let him become an actor.
Take one star -
whose
time already came and went - who is disgruntled with the 80s' more sophisticated, smart, and better comedies (e.g.
When I was a kid in Ohio, I had a good friend
whose
parents had a well-decorated house each Christmas season.
He plays a train engineer
whose
attempts to join the Confederate army are rebuffed (as are the affections of his beloved, believing him to be a coward) but who almost single-handedly manages to win a major battle by using his train to confound the Union army.
Directed by the super prolific Edward Cahn, none of
whose
movies I've ever seen before, but the titles sound pretty good.
This is especially true when Werner meets a beautiful young model (Kyra Sedgwick)
whose
father is a comatose patient at the hospital.
Like more than a few other unfortunate souls, I rented this based on the presence of Jeffrey Combs,
whose
unusually stiff performance tipped me off to the long ride ahead.
Set in the atmosphere of London theater, Dietrich plays Charlotte, a stage star
whose
husband is murdered in their house.
S. J. Perelman, on
whose
play this is based, would sometimes use the nom de plume Sidney Namelrep, a silly, devil-may-care joke that is perfectly in tune with his sense of humor.
My wife
(whose
favorite movie is "Children shouln't play with dead things") even was laughing at how bad this was.
liquid ends up in most of the students(don't ask) turning then into mindless drones
whose
only purpose is to aid the son(said liquid)into freeing daddy aka Satan.Anyway,the whole thing is ludicrous even for sci-fi/fantasy/horror.there
He plays Bruce Pritchard, a football player - that's soccer player to us Americans -
whose
legs give out and he has to live in a home for invalids.
Clichéd, tiresome psychological thriller/horror movie with a one-note central performance by Liv Corfixen,
whose
titular feline is accidentally possessed by a demon, when it happens to gate-crash an occult seance by the upstairs neighbours.
If you watch him as he speaks (on film and in person) this is a man
whose
very core has been horribly affected.
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