Sentences with phrase «about watching»

The 31 - year - old director opens up to ET about watching his latest Marvel film on the big screen for the first time, self - doubt and why Michael B. Jordan was able to transform into the perfect villain.
Who's curious about watching this?
Even so, I can't bring myself to get all that excited about watching this version of Beauty and the Beast a second time anytime soon.
We've read pretty much every Black Panther - centric think piece in existence (we're convinced that no other villain can live up to the brilliance that is Killmonger), but there's something especially sweet about watching the minds who made the movie a success break down Black Panther's complex subject matter themselves.
I think there's something romantic and cinematic about watching people in that chapter of their lives change, evolve, and fall in love.
After all, Godzilla didn't start out about watching monsters fighting; Gojira started as an attempt to cope in some small way with the atomic bomb.
The director was a bit superstitious about watching the nominations but her crew insisted they all get togetehr.
After all, there's something inherently funny about watching a man of his stature throw his body around like a 120 pound Latina woman.
The texting component is absolutely ridiculous and the whole whodunnit scenario isn't satisfying in the least, but there's just something about watching Neeson save the day and kick some butt at 30,000 feet that makes it well worth a watch.
There's something a tad sadistic about watching the many Meat Boys die repeatedly while one makes it successfully to the end goal but it does further boost that feeling of achievement once you've cleared a particularly tricky level.
The excellent theatrical trailer (2:26)(HD) is also included and it's one you can rely on to sell the film to anyone on the fence about watching the movie.
Certainly there's nothing moving about watching Ryan Reynolds ham it up under his red mask, nor much entertaining about Deadpool 2 unless you're a sex - obsessed teenage boy or someone who still finds gay jokes funny.
There's something oddly comfortable and comforting about watching The Hundred - Foot Journey.
There's something a little depressing about watching a talented actor like Jose Ferrer (who, near the start of his career, worked with filmmakers like Otto Preminger and John Huston) slog his way through junk like Zoltan... Hound of Dracula, and though he does deliver a surprisingly effective performance, it's just not enough to disguise the movie's many, many deficiencies.
I love how it's clearly set up to be about grief, about watching Rooney Mara have to contend with the loss of her husband and her greatest love, but doesn't stop there, morphing into something all the more universal.
There's something cathartic about watching people have the sh*t beaten out of each other from the comfort of your own home... or maybe that's just the -LSB-...]
Oh... Well how about watching this trailer anyways?
There's something grim about watching Chicago collapse into piles of debris and ash, even if it is just at the hands (paws?)
Hoary as the training montages with Blunt are, there's something uniquely perverse about watching Cruise learn basic survival skills in his new skin, given his typical projection of obnoxious cool.
We get a few looks at Chiwetel Ejiofor's Baron Mordo, and a glimpse at whatever reality - altering monster Mads Mikkelsen is playing, but it's really about watching cities bend and twist around the characters, culminating in Strange falling through what looks like a version of New York City that's been split, doubled, and bent fully 90 degrees.
There is just something so fun about watching that «zombies killed» counter get higher and higher.
There's something really fun about watching people really good at something.
The most wonderful thing about watching older films right now has been the chance to see 2017 movies, which are still fresh on my mind, in this broader context.
I adore the final scene in this movie just as much, but there's something even more beautiful about watching Joaquin Phoenix's Theodore «meeting» Scarlett Johansson's Samantha - his new operating system.
There's something so special about watching a movie with an audience engaging in shared emotion and laughter,» said Gabriel Hammond, CEO, and Daniel Hammond, Chief Creative Officer, of Broad Green Pictures.
Based on the novel by Herman Koch, one of the best things about watching how Oren Moverman's film unfolds is the way in which we're constantly shown new and surprising sides to our protagonists.
It looks a bit like Weird Science meets those horrific MTV birthday parties meet Skins, which I'm okay about watching I suppose.
It pales in comparison to its predecessor but there's something notably exciting about watching a group of actors make fun of their serious selves onscreen and take delight in kicking some ass.
I had forgotten about watching the T2 deleted scenes and can now recall finding them flat out annoying.
Still, there are sections here that grab you by the lapel, and they're almost always about watching the guys around the table, waiting for the gloat, the mistake or the fateful tell about to turn the room cold.
Zazie Beetz was at the New York City premiere of Deadpool 2 on Wednesday where she expressed excitement about watching the movies with fans and hinted at the possible X-Force film.
There is something inspirational about watching Walter's daydreams shift into reality as he goes from living his everyday somewhat boring life and watching him take that leap and literally jump onto that helicopter.
There's a lot to admire about the movie thanks to some strong performances from the four actors, but your mileage will vary depending on how you feel about watching these fathers, husbands and sons die before your very eyes.
There's something special about watching the grainy goodness unfold on the big screen.
We live in a Golden Age of superhero TV shows, but these ugly costumes have made us think twice about watching these heroes on the small screen!
There's something cathartic about watching two grown - ass adult men fight like kids.
It's all about watching familiar faces together in big pyrotechnics and facets of humanity, so the crossover doesn't have to be a movie in its strictest sense.
If you are living in India, and are worried about watching Oscars, don't be.
Granted, there's something really special about watching the two iconic puzzle - solvers team up to point their fingers at people and yell «objection!»
The curious thing about watching the film again after so long is how much it belongs to the women in its cast.
There's something electric about watching go - for - broke performances such as these, a sort of contact high emanating from the emotional extremes onscreen.
If you've never played Xenoblade Chronicles before, you don't have to worry about watching it anyway: there's still many more regions in the game that aren't shown in the following video!
And I'm guessing no studio wants to deal with the backlash of releasing a movie about watching people die, but it is finished and just waiting for a release.
The laugh track sitcoms are pretty much a thing of the past but there is something really relaxing about watching the Ranch.
It's about you watching the door.
Yet given how rigid and formulaic most mainstream animation is, there's something liberating about watching a traditionally hand - drawn cartoon thumb its nose so gleefully at traditional G - rated storytelling.
Though a feisty Indian character in the film does constantly berate England for its colonizing ways, there is something very sad about watching Abdul being so passive and mistreated.
It takes a bit to get going, but once he fails in his attempts to roll a joint it's the kind of film you can't help feeling good about watching.
The game of dodgeball, mostly a schoolyard activity, is not really that great of a sport, but because of its childish reputation and the undercurrent of physical cruelty, there is just something humorous about watching it, and like his commercial spots, Thurber uses these elements to his comedic advantage.
It's just one of those quirky «locked in the closet» films that isn't so much about watching people tearing down the walls but bouncing around them in such a funny manner it works.
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