Sentences with phrase «many scenes in this film»

The screening was praised by advocates as a milestone in Saudi's modernization efforts, but attendees were reminded of the country's conservative laws when crucial scenes in the film were censored for modesty.
There's a scene in the film Up in the Air where George Clooney's character, Ryan while firing J.K. Simmons's character, Bob realizes he isn't buying the platitudes spouted upon him, and helps him see inspiration in his unexpected transition...
«I am upset that a pretend exercise in an improvisation, from an actual scene in the film, has been written about as if it was a real scenario.
In the most haunting scene in the film, sometime in the middle of the wintry night after he drives by Akron, Ohio, where he knows his two - year old child lives, whom he until recently thought was aborted, Davis encounters one of those cats again, apparently one he abandoned, when it darts out in front of his car.
In an interview with Wired about his movie Inception, director Christopher Nolan is questioned about an ambiguous scene in the film: So, there's no one right answer.Oh no, I've got an answer.You do?!
There's a scene in the film where Krasinski's character and Emily Blunt's character (who are husband and wife in the film as well as real life), share a romantic moment together as they both wear one earbud, and listen to a song — JUST LIKE JIM AND PAM DID.
There is a scene in the film where a young boy prepares himself to fight another boy.
We were contacted by the internationally renowned film corporation, 20th Century Fox, who were looking for skilled extras to be part of a fencing scene in a film about Tolkien's life, starring Nicholas Hoult.
Gorrell immediately made the connection to the copy machine smashing scene in the film «Office Space,» and decided to call her project «Mom Space.»
The gentleman who performed said seance was cleaning up but upon seeing this aftermath I could not help but picture the party scene in the film.
In the first flick, Neil Patrick Harris played a truly messed - up version of himself and created the funny scenes in the film.
Jack hands off one of his stories early in the film for his brothers to read and while hints to its plot are dropped, only later does it manifest itself into one of the few scenes in the film that felt not merely fresh to me but touching; briefly, we glimpse an event from the day of the funeral, awkward and uncomfortable, with the kind of details that only siblings might later recall.
You can feel the Middle Eastern country's impending wave of frustration, corruption, and paranoia simmering underneath every scene in the film like white noise in the background.
, a map a Tehran for your next vacation, showing notable locations from scenes in the film, a 40 - page book with images and info on the movie, and a reproduction of Tony Mendez's CIA card (with the face of Ben Affleck as Tony, alas).
There are few scenes in films that I regret seeing, two of which are unfortunately in Susan Seidelman's maudlin «The Boynton Beach Bereavement Club.»
The 3:47 «Meet Katie» focuses on the story of the furry little yak who just steals her scenes in the film, as the creators talk about the development of the character from a background drawing to full - fledged cult hero.
Some scenes in this film that can be considered iconic and this film wil certainly get a deserved high ranking among the cult classics.
To draw out of him natural crying during a scene in the film, for example, Levy played for Goyo «First Breath After Coma» by Explosions in the Sky.
Some scenes in this film that can be considered iconic and this film wil certainly get a deserved high
I guess reading the book before watching the film would help better explain some of the scenes in the film.
There are some gruesomely well - orchestrated scenes of body horror (one particular dissection is nightmarishly staged) and Garland's knack for gonzo imagery ensures that many scenes in the film will make a lasting impression.
My personal favorite being the first bar scene in the film with the song choice and the choreographed dance scene was just beautiful.
It is the strongest (and shortest) scene in the film.
All scenes in the film have either dialogue or music (or silence), but never both together.
If however you can enjoy something a bit different, there's great acting, good tension, and some shocking scenes in this film that will mean it'll have some lasting value at least.
There is the right amount of «creepy» underscore for many of the «creepy» scenes in the film (although there were probably only two really good scares in the film), an adequate sampling of which is provided for on the CD, which runs a tad over 35 minutes long.
The Fox Movie Channel presents: Making of a Scene clip gives more specific detail on one scene in the film, and again should appeal to those with an interest in FX.
A lot of scenes in the film just don't make any sense and don't add anything to the thread of a narrative that runs through it, but they are striking and do have an effect on you, which is perhaps the purpose.
Her name is Roxane (Rosario Dawson), a Babylonian girl, and though the only sex scene in the film is between her and Alexander, it is never suggested that he actually loves her.
But even with this scene in the film, the critics still just don't «get it».
What's absent from this scene in the film is McCandless» sporadic reasoning for doing this — that despite the potency as adventure, it is another in a chain of actions intent to further mute the memory of his family.
The tight hallways and tiny rooms throughout the ship do emulate the claustrophobic feeling of the first two movies, which amplifies the tension and thrill of many scenes in the film.
Right there in the animated background is the one scene in the film that has girls getting their tops off.
There's also another scene in the film where Cynthia Dunbar is OPENLY PRAYING to the Lord that he should invade every aspect of our lives, INCLUDING OUR PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
The performances and the script are good, especially Gooding who has some of the best scenes in the film.
It presents the usual disclaimers that «some of the events, characters and scenes in the film have been changed.»
The first scene in the film kind of gives the ending away and leaves you expecting it, but in a way that is a good thing considering what this film has in store.
Oddly enough, it is the baseball scenes in this film that intrigued me the most.
BTW, that scene (the first scene in the film) is here: https://www.thewrap.com/rooney-mara-cate-blanchett-carol-exclusive-video/
There are some particularly provocative scenes in the film, juxtaposing the speed with which shocking violence can occur, arising out of seemingly ordinary and familiar situations which will undoubtedly stay with the audience.
One thing I found quite funny in particular was director Tim Story's decision to have her wear glasses in many of the scenes in the film.
Every second scene in the film had me in buckets.»
Possibly the most famous scene in the film (from what I've heard) is where a tear gas canister is thrown towards the camera and you hear someone shout «look out Haskell it's real!»
«There's Always Vanilla Film Locations» (11 mins., 1080p) has «Romero historian» Lawrence DeVincentz talking over a slideshow of contemporary photographs of locations used for scenes in the film (some of them featuring him or his buddy Spooky Daz Sargeant in the frame matching the pose of the original actors) with authentic production stills occasionally appearing in an inset.
The ghosts, nightmares and creepy noises (horror elements) are not as disturbing as the two extremely violent scenes in the film, one at the beginning, one at the end.
The majority of the scenes in the film do not take place in
It's too soon, is what I'm trying to say, for Levy to call so many of his scenes in this film «classic» — though I should tell you that I'm doubtful it'll ever be the right time.
«Glory» tells the story of the 54th Regiment largely through the eyes of Shaw (Matthew Broderick), who in an early scene in the film is seen horrified and disoriented by the violence of the battlefield.
There are two sensitive scenes in the film that deal with emotion and each one is handled by Sam Neill.
Gayle's disarming turn makes us instantly care about her character's fate, making her a fully realised character beyond the cliché her role might have been, and her climactic scenes in the film are extraordinarily powerful.
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