Sentences with phrase «like filmgoers»

Like filmgoers, museum visitors tend to suspend their disbelief when entering the gallery, but the artist confronts them with the tools of fabrication so that they must consider the film as a composition of various parts rather than a seamless whole.

Not exact matches

The scene in which Lazarus is raised from the tomb will probably elicit laughter from cynical younger filmgoers, for in an attempt to be authentic to the period, Scorsese has wrapped Lazarus so that he looks like a mummy who wandered over from a horror movie.
The relationship reminded me a bit of the dynamic between Christian filmgoers and «secular» Hollywood films, like Exodus, which attempt to adapt the Bible.
Films by Quentin Tarantino aren't exactly Halley's Comet, but for a while there, they didn't come as often as some filmgoers would have liked.
I'm an avid filmgoer so I can accommodate my liking to either of the two.
Garland's film has a lot to offer for the diligent and focused filmgoer; however, its carefully structured, sometimes plodding revelation of details and plot may frustrate audiences more accustomed to quick answers and bountiful action responses, which are few and far between, but no less intense in a film like this.
Like a princess in a fairytale it's surrounded by a labyrinth of eerie tunnels, which heroic filmgoers must brave if they wish to sample the delights within.
This is the Marvel movie that divides the fans from the casual filmgoers, as the movies become more like a TV series in which the world is saved from disaster every week.
«The core audience is the cross-section of documentary filmgoers and those with [inclinations] for adventure like [travelers and hikers, climbers, skiers],» said Arentz.
But Haneke is also implying here how filmgoers use the public space to engage their own desires, whether carnal (like the couple having sex in their car) or vicarious (anyone attending a screening of The Piano Teacher, perhaps).
My apologies if this film review is beginning to sound like an editorial rather than a movie review, as I don't meant to preach, but I just feel that Syriana is a good film worth seeing, except that I'm frustrated by the small segment of filmgoers that I can recommend it to.
The plan worked for Think Like a Man, which ruled the box office until The Avengers assembled, so What to Expect When You're Expecting stands a chance of luring some filmgoers, presumably female ones.
Like Vertigo for Hitchcock, like Citizen Kane for Welles and like 2001: A Space Odyssey for the aforementioned Kubrick, many filmgoers and critics of their times did not come away liking these films, thinking them too dark and perhaps too ambitious to truly entertLike Vertigo for Hitchcock, like Citizen Kane for Welles and like 2001: A Space Odyssey for the aforementioned Kubrick, many filmgoers and critics of their times did not come away liking these films, thinking them too dark and perhaps too ambitious to truly entertlike Citizen Kane for Welles and like 2001: A Space Odyssey for the aforementioned Kubrick, many filmgoers and critics of their times did not come away liking these films, thinking them too dark and perhaps too ambitious to truly entertlike 2001: A Space Odyssey for the aforementioned Kubrick, many filmgoers and critics of their times did not come away liking these films, thinking them too dark and perhaps too ambitious to truly entertain.
Like Hitchcock's mantra that films can not exceed the holding time of the average filmgoer's bladder or Poe's insistence that the short story last not one more floor - board thudding heartbeat beyond the average reader's notion of a «sitting» (whatever that is), flash fiction has been hastily defined in terms of its least vital statistic — not what it does, or what it says, but what it looks lLike Hitchcock's mantra that films can not exceed the holding time of the average filmgoer's bladder or Poe's insistence that the short story last not one more floor - board thudding heartbeat beyond the average reader's notion of a «sitting» (whatever that is), flash fiction has been hastily defined in terms of its least vital statistic — not what it does, or what it says, but what it looks likelike.
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