Window
in sentence
1990 examples of Window in a sentence
For example, when Julia wakes in the strange house and looks out the
window
I found myself thinking that her sense of isolation would be enhanced with an exterior shot focused on her face and then moving backwards to include the house and its isolated location.
I know it dosen't have much creepiness, but has the 'trick' as in "Trick or Treat," as Jerry did to Tom with the
window
blind and the vacuum-cleaner with a collared-shirt hanging on it to make it like a ghost; but still like to put it on my list of Halloween cartoons.
A real
window
into a specific time and place in history.
Plenty of stylish and bone crunching violence, a
window
upon some less than orthodox sexual goings on plus the family aspect.
It gets to the point where he is dressing and acting like the former tenant and you realize it's only a matter of time before he decides tor re-enact her fatal leap out the window...
Yes, it's still there, and although shorn of its heavy coat of ivy and lacking a blind priest/nun at the top-floor window, looks much the same as it did in this picture.
Panic In The Streets opens in high noir style, a view along a dark street followed by a camera tilt upwards to a window, behind which is playing out a sleazy card game - an opening flourish which, along with some of the location shooting, anticipates some of the atmosphere Welles brought a decade later in Touch Of Evil.
From the opening scenes in the horn factory, to the car motor running from the back seat of the car, to Ollie answering the phone and being accidentally pushed out the
window
by Stan, I think this was perhaps their best latter day film.
Also no, you were not supposed to wince when Carl broke a window; it was funny how Lord Foxley said "oh yes!" to get more money for breakage and the manager said at the same time "oh no" also referring to the money.
A fun little B-movie Zombie romp, about bank-robbers that pick the wrong night/town to rob a bank...as long as you keep in mind-it is what it is-it's enjoyable, especially if you are a fan of cheesy B-movies and/or horror...the acting is so-so(no Oscars will be handed out but I have seen much, much worse), the effects are OK(not on par with any of the Romero or big-budget horror movies...but I'm guessing they weren't working with a ton of money to begin with), and the plot/story is passable(in a movie like this logic pretty much goes out of the
window
and suspension of disbelief is the order of the day...or you can just laugh it up-you choose).
But it's sad, because, for a show that was supposed to throw all conventions through the window, it surely was the most conventional of them all.
They spend all but the last 3 minutes of the film trying so desperately to make you believe that this is a documentary and not just awful camera work and bad acting and then they throw that out the
window
with the "big twist".
Loy pops up throughout, but, unfortunately, she's
window
dressing.
and the part where Dave falls out of the
window
with the doll... wow.
These were my thoughts as I slipped my money through the
window
at the ticket booth back in the fall of 1990.
Bad guys' lawyer is finally testifying against former employers who both die in the most ludicrous final scene in the history of gangster movies: both choose to stand by the wide
window
panes while police is firing from below the street.
My bedroom
window
faced the back of another building and alley, and in that alley lived a large poor family that always had stray cats.
In one scene they're outside and Porky asked Sylvester to closed the
window
which launches the bed back to the house which was an good gag.
If I have to sit through one more of these terrible uninspired chick flicks, I just might throw my TV out the
window.
Case in point, one of the most hilarious scenes was a man jumping out of a
window
10 or so stories (get this, to avoid death) and you not only can't see him jumping, you simply hear glass and a character looking behind drawn shades.
But the movie provides a
window
onto contemporary life in China, with its focus upon villagers in the city, the consuming quality of subsistence--daily struggle, family and local cruelties--and the appeal of movies as escape, fantasy, and, ultimately, as source of community.
The start of the film just was so uncoordinated while searching for the girl his fat enemy who mind you put up a huge fight by being chucks punching bag get's thrown out of a
window
only to hear Chucks reason for it.
The opening scene is quite good, as we see a woman pushed from a
window
and her blood spilling onto a rose.
While there are some nice creepy atmospheric moments in this tale of a young, somewhat psychic girl trying to figure out the mysterious goings-on at her boarding school, that soon goes out the
window
in favor of gruesome beheadings, straight-razors to the face, and giant vats of human viscera.
Things become worse for Sister Gertrude as Father Janot is bludgeoned to death and thrown out of a high
window
to make it look like suicide.
I didn't know what to expect when I saw this movie, but I wanted to throw it out the
window
when I came across the first scene of the dead animals.
Then Yune pitches all of that out the
window
by displaying the martial arts skills of a bag of hammers.
No parent worries, money doesn't seem to be an issue, reality happens to float right out the
window.
She happens across an ad in the
window
for a hostess at a sex club, and like most naive people, thinks all she will have to do is bring tea to the customers and clean off tables.
This is another in a trend of kids movies where morals go right out the
window.
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