Sentences with phrase «audience attention where»

You can hear these things about virtually any film at a festival — elbow - jabbing marketplaces for audience attention where, if your work doesn't have a timely hook, you may as well be dead.

Not exact matches

Social media has become the place where many people sound off their opinions, so pay close attention to what your target audience is saying.
Knowing where you can play a lead role in owning the audience's attention will help you fill your editorial calendar with impactful content that helps you meet your business goals.
But otherwise there is little sign in the writers of any attention to nature; their audiences, where known, are almost exclusively urban.
The realm of «social spam» and the quantified audience is the blurriest of these — where fairly acceptable and established methods of getting attention and audience management may begin to shade into spam.
Make sure you don't become one of the self - centered people who must be the center of attention no matter where they are or in which audience.
Although Nixon's starring role on the hugely popular series may have brought her to the attention of a new audience, observers of the New York theater had been watching the actor on and off Broadway since 1980, where she had performed in productions that included David Rabe's Hurlyburly, Tom Stoppard's The Real Thing, Angels in America, and Indiscretions, for which she earned a Tony nomination.Born in New York City on April 9, 1966, Nixon made her film debut in the 1980 movie Little Darlings.
A lot of attention has gone into the film's video games, computer imagery and costumes, to the point where simply watching these artifacts is half the fun... But eventually Hackers turns tedious, perhaps not realizing that an audience can get tired of the same old equations floating in cyberspace.
The gamesmanship continues in Abel's modest apartment, where the close attention paid to his earlier activities lends his attempts to hide that coded message an instinctive audience sympathy, even though he's spying on the good old U.S.A.. By observing a spy at the ground level (the camera swoops low around Abel's pursuers» feet, as if it's combing the apartment itself), Spielberg establishes the humanity so crucial to the rest of the film.
But in other sequences, where we are plunged into the mind of Captain Willard (Martin Sheen), Murch shrunk the sound space down to one channel (the center channel) to literally «focus» the audience's attention on one or two distinct sounds.
Dial M for Murder premiered at the Westminster Theatre in London in 1952, only for it to be made into an expert crime mystery thriller by Alfred Hitchcock two years later, while Wait Until Dark, another complex and dark play in the vein of Hitchcock's interests directed by Arthur Penn (who would helm Bonnie and Clyde the very next year), saw the light of day in early 1966 on Broadway, where it instantly attracted the attention of both the audience and Warner Brothers, determined to turn it into a feature film starring none other than Hollywood's sweetheart Audrey Hepburn in a much darker, insidious story than her filmography had ever witnessed.
Where the film succeeds is the retention of the audience's attention.
Gerwig already played a version of that 80s throwback in the remake of Arthur but wasn't utilized nearly as well as she is here, where she really can hold the attention of audiences who come in wanting a sweet romp.
Unlike a theme park ride which often directs your attention through sound cues placed in a 360 degree fashion around a room (think of the Hall of Presidents in Walt Disney World), cinema sound must contend with a two - dimensional screen on which audiences must stayed focused, even with 3 - D presentations where your eyes remain fixed on a general axis, where any movement outside that axis might reveal the images to be cardboard cutouts — a phenomenon all too familiar to me.
Ground Zeroes is the prologue to Phantom Pain, and it is intended to be similar to the pre-title sequence of a Hollywood movie, where something major happens to catch the audience's attention, before the real story starts.
The captive fascination swelling from that gathers attention and an audience where it normally would not.
When an author knows who their audience is, how their audience engages, and where they are buying, they know where to focus their time and attention.
But in a world where attention spans are short, publishers seem reluctant to trust that their audience will remember even a standout debut a couple of years hence.
To truly stand out, you need to be where your target audience is and do something to capture their attention.
In a space where everyone's vying for the recruiter's attention, standing out by personalizing your messages to a targeted audience helps by volumes.
This is even more evident in the communication industry where the ultimate aim is to capture attention of the target audience.
This is the part of the feature where you can really draw the attention of your audience.
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