Sentences with phrase «ai scene selection»

Each episode is divided into about six chapters for easy navigation, though there is no scene selection screen for each episode.
Inside the case there is a scene selections insert with an advertisement for other DVDs on the backside.

Not exact matches

New to the beauty scene is California - based haircare line, Playa, with a selection of carefully constructed, botanical - based hair care products... Read More
New to the beauty scene is California - based haircare line, Playa, with a selection of carefully constructed, botanical - based hair care products that promise salon level performance, without the traditional toxic ingredients, found in commercial hair care products.
The selection of New Jersey's top federal law enforcement officer is part of a broader game of political horse - trading playing out behind the scenes in Washington, Trenton, and New York.
If you believe in scoring the fashion scene with uncompromised vivaciousness and much verve, Myntra's selection of sleeveless shirts is just for you.
Christmas Backdrops, Christmas Photography Backdrops are the perfect addition to any holiday party or photo shoot from Kate backdrop!Vast selection of Christmas backdrops for photography, We have everything from snowy holiday scenes to traditional Christmas backgrounds, also make custom backdrops!
«Inspired by the après - ski scene at Aspen Mountain and a spring deck party at Val D'Isere,» Embers Ski Lodge is located in the heart of Nashville and features unique mixed drinks, the largest whiskey selection in town, and a menu of Pacific Northwest items.
We're steeped in history and beautiful architecture, we've got an overwhelming selection of dining choices, our music scene is rich, and our art scene is even richer.
Selection The bar scene will always be there, but why bother when you can browse thousands of profiles.
It must be exactly this meme just a 3 feel uncomfortable, and free DVD selection the wrestlers the sign up for tuesday night find comedy scene all used.
The DVD included here is as close to a no - frills presentation as you can get, offering just «Languages» and «Play», because scene selection would have killed them!
Pearce has also written a well - carpentered screenplay; there are some very big scenes and big moments here — sometimes too big — but he gives us a carefully crafted dramatic setup, an intriguingly curated selection of suspects for the crime and all of it building to a fascinating, finely balanced ambiguity in the movie's climactic stages.
Filho obviously wants to convey the naive outlook an impressionable young girl would have on her own situation, but there's far too much manipulation involved to take her selection of scenes seriously.
Outside of Vinson and some choice scoring / music selection that, along with its story, evokes some of the memorable 1970s work from John Carpenter (Assault on Precinct 13 and The Fog come to mind), You're Next is a fairly dreadful choice for a scare flick, with ineffective acting choices, a laughable premise, and no real surprises offered to anyone who actually pays attention to the poorly written dialogue that occurs between scenes of violence.
DVD Extras Anamorphic 1.85:1; incredibly atmospheric animated menus; scene selection; choice of 2.0 / Dolby digital 5.1; full audio commentary by co - writer / director Shane Meadows, co - writer / star Paddy Considine, and producer Mark Herbert (all giggling), revealing that the decision to include Anthony in scenes other than flashbacks was last - minute, that the script changed daily on - set, that the castle was a disused zoo, and that the original ending was too close to Get Carter; nine minutes of commentary out - takes (Easter egg); Optimum trailer reel; What U Sitting On?
The menu options are listed along the bottom of the screen, and include: Play Movie, Languages, Scene Selections, and Special Features.
Indexed by chapter headings separate from those found in the scene - selection sub-menus, Scott indelicately remembers, among other things, that David Bennent's vocals were re-dubbed by the New York - born Alice Playten because a studio stooge said he «sounds like a goddamn Nazi;» that a 10 - year - old doubled for peak - diving Cruise; and that the film's convincing fairy F / X were accomplished with fishing line and a light bulb.
Almost every chase scene and action sequence is underscored by a recognizable music cue from the classic Elton John / Bernie Taupin songbook, including «Crocodile Rock,» «I'm Still Standing,» and other super-obvious pop selections you never want to hear at a karaoke night.
But because the DVD offers instant» chapter» access, the sheer pleasure of riffling through the scene - selection menus and sampling standout sequences like 45s on a jukebox can't be beat.
Three inserts are located in the case: a scene selection list / ad, a Disney Movie Rewards sheet with code and information on the heavily - promoted soon - to - end program, and a booklet which announces DVDs and other media involving Playhouse Disney fare.
The stars» selections varied (not all of them strictly speaking sex scenes), and among them were a number of great moments in Criterion films — from the chaste love affair of David Lean's Brief Encounter to the violent eroticism of Nagisa Oshima's In the Realm of the Senses.
The only downer is the lack of any extras whatsoever, unless the Scene Selection is your thing...
The options are listed along the bottom, and include: Play Movie, Scene Selection, Set Up, and Special Features.
The only extras are animated menus, scene selection, the original trailer, and a stills gallery - but the film is presented in a restored and remastered widescreen print reviving its original Panavision 2.35:1 aspect ratio, and the DVD includes an excellent collectors booklet.
Bertolucci cuts these scenes with clips from a wonderful selection of classic cinema: Garbo memorizing her room in Queen Christina, Nadine Nortier's suicide in Bresson's Mouchette, Fred Astaire waking Ginger Rogers in Top Hat, Odile, Arthur, and Franz's sprint through the Louvre in Bande á part, and so on — asking his young actors to mimic these scenes in motions that are part trance, part tango.
Though it claims chapter stops are hastily placed at every ten minutes, they are in fact fittingly anchored to commercial fadeouts (which were spread more than ten minutes apart back in» 88), but you're on your own for scene selection.
In a Frederick Wiseman - ish way, some of his subjects appear for only a single brief scene, while some recur throughout, and they're certainly a broad selection: an aristocrat who hires his family home out for film shoots, paramedics, an eel fishermen, some transsexual prostitutes, and a man trying to stop insects from destroying palm trees.
The menu options are listed along the bottom of the screen, and include: Play, Scene Selections, Audio, Subtitles, and Special Features.
On submenus, making up for the lack of animation is the fact that the voice actors appear on virtually all of them (even «Scene Selection») to comment on what's being offered.
Where this single soundtrack selection of Aileen 2 is pointed, even prophetic, the music in Monster is strictly prosaic (a love scene following a murder scene is banally accompanied by Tommy James & The Shondells» «Crimson And Clover») and illustrative of the movie's tendency to take the path of less resistance.
No trailers for this or anything else are found on a scored, static menu reproducing the Sunshiney cover art with only Play Movie, Subtitles, and Scene Selections in the way of options.
Rounding out the extras is a selection of SD deleted scenes, nine in total, with optional commentary from Stewart and, I think, Gvozdas.
That's it, unless you count the newly created «Movie Showcase» on the back of the Scene Selections DVD Guide.
The static main menus set the opening titles» score to a brief synopsis of that disc's installment, which is also given a simple scene selection menu.
Inside the keepcase, there is a fold - out poster for My Scene Goes Hollywood: The Movie, a two - sided insert with chapter selections and extras overview, and a coupon booklet which predictably promotes upcoming DTVs (Bambi II, Kronk's New Groove) and offers savings on obvious (Tarzan II DVD, the new Lilo & Stitch Island Favorites CD) and not - so - obvious (Land O'Frost lunchmeats and Dole fruit bowls) products.
Along the way a selection of «secret agent» pharmaceuticals are dispensed or injected at appropriate scene changes, leaving characters with side effects ranging from unconsciousness to giddiness.
There are some terrifying moments in this film when there is seemingly nothing too alarming in the scene yet Wan's shot selection and pacing fully evoke the mood needed for the tension to feel palpable.
There are interesting side - by - side storyboard / finished scene comparisons for the film's more visually complex sequences; a selection of rather understandably deleted scenes that can be viewed with commentary by director and producer as well as within the context of the film (albeit in rather cumbersome fashion); a largely useless montage of still photos from the production cut to a cue of John Murphy's score; the usual cast and crew filmographies and production notes; plus a full - frame version of the film to go with the nicely transferred anamorphic widescreen one.
There's nothing special about the packaging; Valiant comes in a black keepcase (there's some logic behind the color, but finding it requires more thought than interest and space probably allow) with a form for a new 100 - Disney DVD sweepstakes, a booklet promoting Kronk's New Groove, Bambi II, and Lady and the Tramp, and a two - sided insert which nearly duplicates the cover art in addition to providing scene selections and an overview of the extras.
It is still an interesting selection in the giallo genre especially for the memorable burlesque scene and the final climatic ending with multiple twists and turns.
The Set Up and Scene Selections are just still frames with an accompanying, always chipper, film score.
He displays obvious enthusiasm and passion for the project (particularly over various music selections), but he's perhaps a bit too enamored of his own work, for he often limits his comments to brief ones that set up the circumstances of each scene, which then plays with its normal soundtrack.
Inside is a four - page scene selection insert that also features a short article about the movie.
When Mister Blonde ties up a police officer in a chair while the DJ discusses the Dylanesque qualities of the tune that is about to play one knows something vicious is about to happen, but it's within the playfulness of the song selection and the movement of Michael Madsen's gleeful death waltz that the scene finds a rhythm and bouncy quality that delivers the dissonant quality of murder mixed with pop music.
Warner continues to place a distant last place among the major studios in menu creativity, simply dropping an short score excerpt over poster artwork formatted to fill 16:9 screens on both discs and, as is now the case, pouring no effort into the DVD's generic submenus (which don't even include a scene selection one).
Packaged in a regular Amray case, Live Feed is presented in 16 × 9 widescreen, with interactive menus, scene selection, trailers and optional Spanish subtitles.
A selection of deleted scenes include a comic - book style alternate open and an extended ending in which Casey Jones (voiced by Chris Evans) proposes to April (Sarah Michelle Gellar); all of the excised footage is in varying stages of completion and is accompanied by commentary by Munroe (which, unfortunately, can not be turned off).
In the absence of dubs and subtitles, all we find is an animated main menu and scene selection screens.
The DVD gives us its version of the same main menu, with only a language selection screen beyond it (because scene selection would have been going too far?).
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