Sentences with phrase «audience had the same feeling»

Not exact matches

But having divested most of the family's fossil fuel assets in the late 1990s to set up private conglomerate Coril Holdings Ltd., Ron may not have been feeling the same pain as those in the audience.
I can so relate to the feeling for «competing» i notice bloggers that have started the same time as me or younger and they have much more a bigger reader audience and then i feel like what are they doing to achieve this!
So by the same token, having pieced it together, I never felt that the Mandingo fight was particularly difficult to watch, but we could tell when we screened it for an audience that we really felt them cringe.
So I Feel Pretty has a real shot at capitalizing on that very same audience and delivering a strong message about self - empowerment, especially among women.
This same story and idea could have been structured in a different way with better character development and more heart to have the audience feel a bit more sympathy for David or the children.
Cindy Meehl's funny, deeply inspiring and crowd pleasing film about Buck Brannaman has ignited the passion of audiences in Park City and we're confident the rest of the country will feel the same.
Rosemarie DeWitt has the same «making the audience feel at ease» way about her.
It's argued that Vol 2 of the Guardians of the Galaxy story doesn't hit the same milestones as the first because the characters felt a little stagnant or not as fleshed out as they were as individuals in the first film, but apart from this, Guardians 2 draws audiences in spades because it's not only consistently fun and hilarious, but because there is true emotional resonance in characters that would never be expected like Rocket Raccoon and Yondu, and Peter's abandonment issues that surface when he encounters his biological father, Ego (Kurt Russel).
I don't know if mainstream audiences would feel the same way as I did, but «The Party» held my attention from start to finish.
I really liked Giamatti, but I felt the character was only in film to explain how earthquakes happen so that stupid people in the audience would know what the hell is going on much in the same way that Jeff Goldblum is in every movie.
Also, the story has to follow a predictable path, I fully understand that, which means it's important for the hero to lose everything at the end of the second act, but I have a feeling that most of the audience will be a little confused as well as depressed since the science - heavy talk abounds at the same time the hero is at his lowest.
Still, it feels like movies like Darkest Hour and The Post, both well - made films about big, important political concerns being dealt with on a granular level, would be competing for the same votes, and neither one of them appears to have captivated wide enough segments of the audience to accumulate the votes they'll need.
Well, your learners will have the exact same feeling if you do not create the characters of your 3D simulations wisely, and according to your audience.
To me, bespoke «wacky» games, like recent Saints Row releases and Goat Simulator, feel vaguely desperate — as soon as you tell an audience you're going to make them laugh, you assume a certain ego, and the same audience becomes reluctant to let you have your way.
The hope must be that visitors see Bathers at Asnières (2010), his interpretation of Seurat's painting of the same name, and feel a welcome connection (the copy's cloistered simplicity is a way of reminding his audience that until Sasnal was 17, when Solidarity was re-legalised, travel to London, where Seurat's original hangs, would have been all but impossible).
Mortgage lenders, on the other hand, have a captive audience and don't always feel the same urgency.
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