Sentences with phrase «bad guy roles»

Because they look fierce, they are usually cast in the bad guy roles of attack dogs.
However, I think you are rewriting her story so that medical intervention takes on the bad guy role, when it was likely employed to mitigate risks to her and the baby, and quite possibly had that effect.
So while this might not be a good calling card for snagging a bad guy role, how about proof that Dujardin would make an incredible Saturday Night Live host?
The movie features that excellent Japanese actor Hiroyuki Sanada, who gave a performance to treasure in Yoji Yamada's The Twilight Samurai (2002)-- but is wasted here in a minor, bad guy role.
The only way that Norton fits into this boardroom bad guy role is that his eyes are perfect for the sleepless atmosphere of the control rooms hunting down Cross via a speedy internet connection.
Morgan appeared on «Popcorn With Peter Travers» to talk about his bad guy role in the hit AMC series, «The Walking Dead».
After enduring Ryan Reynolds» goofy insults as the villainous Ajax / Francis in Deadpool, Ed Skrein is moving on to another bad guy role in a comic book adaptation — well, technically it's a manga adaptation, but it's the same sort of thing.

Not exact matches

If these tells make you think you've grown into the role of workplace bad guy inadvertently — that is, you weren't born a jerk, and you don't want to die one — all is not lost.
One way to get out of the bad - guy role is to put employees in charge of providing feedback to one another.
Along the way it was my job to play the role of sympathetic counsel, mediator or bad guy depending on the situation.
Then again while I decry what is happening, you are defending the actions of a murderer, so it looks like we both fall neatly into the «good guy» / «bad guy» roles.
Here too one must wonder at the depth of the change if there is too total a reversal so that we only have a new set of actors in the traditional good - guy and bad - guy roles.
I sought to examine how ineffectual any loveless strategy is because, without love, one overcomes the bad guy only to take up his role.
1) On the pitch: - we always start 3 -4-3 but always switch back to a back 4... it isn't tactical as we look bad in both - Bellerin playibg LWB when you have the best in the bundesliga last season on the bench - Welbeck playing the striker role when he can do everything but score when you have Lacazette a record signing on the - Monreal in back 3 when you have Kostafi who can flank Per in the middle protecting him against pace as well as having a commending figure and - Telling Xhaka to not play as a 3rd offensive player when Ramsey dashes - Playing a guy in Ox so out of position and persisting with him over preseason as if he would be there for years when it is clear he doesn't want to play for us (his case is a weird one)
I think Oz is fragile physically and mentally, the premier league is very physiacal so he would always struggle in this section, add that to him beeing played and overuse in a position (LW) that does not suit him and he s lost and dejected quickly.People ask him to be tougher but some people are just by nature more fragile, with depressive tendancy.The guy should play in his favourite role and not be overuse as he probably hates himself when he has bad games.
They have a shelf life of 8/10 years at the very top if they are lucky so who can begrudge them the opportunity to make hay whilst the sun is shining... am not saying Sanchez is not money driven but the way the guy plays i can mortgage my life he actually enjoys the game, enjoys wining first and foremost then money comes 2nd... like the author of the article rightly pointed out, he was in Messi's shadow at Barca and could not express himself fully, now he is at a club where he is the main man and given a free role and license to express himself and i very much doubt if he will want to go to a club like Madrid (as been rumoured in the dailies today) to relieve the bad experience he suffered at Barca because let us face facts, he is never going to displace CR7 as the main man, so even if Madrid sells Benzema or Bale to make room for him he will be back to the same position he was at Barca, this time he will be playing 2nd fiddle to CR7 so my guess is all the Madrid talks is been fed the press by his agents to drive a hard bargain when contract extension talks resumes.....
loooool it worked almost against every team even the ones with a physical presence now cazorla had one two bad games, the «told ya» guys come out of their holes xD Look i don't care if cazorla was bad in this game, putting cazorla in that important role DLP was brilliant, and ALL of you guys loved that when it worked almost every game, so don't come now with such stupid «told ya» statements
Dana, I don't know where you ever got the idea that it was not a parent's role to be the bad guy from time to time.
Second is Ralph Fiennes, who has clearly relished his role as one of this centuries» most gleefully evil and iconic bad guys.
In the meantime, a deliciously nasty bad guy, a white South African gangster and arms dealer named Klaue (Andy Serkis, in a role he introduced three years ago in Avengers: Age of Ultron), is keen to get his hands on some vibranium himself, which involves an unexpected side trip to Busan, South Korea, for a prolonged sequence heavy on chases and tough - guy action but rather more conventional than the rest of the film.
The role - reversal, with you as the bad guy, brings up some interesting questions, but the story doesn't take near enough advantage of that fact.
Charley's mom walked out when he was young, and his dad is a beer - bellied slob (played by one - time Calvin Klein model Travis Fimmel, here looking more like the redneck version of his rugged «Vikings» character), not a bad guy, but no role model either, getting drunk after work and using what remains of his homecoming - king charm to bring home local women (it's a part better suited to Steve Zahn, who appears later, miscast as an abusive, borderline - homeless man).
Seen through the eyes of an idealistic young guard, this movie avoids casting the participants in either strictly good - guy or bad - guy roles.
Banderas» charming, often comic performance, a cute one by child actor Adrian Alonso as Zorro's son and pint - sized counterpart, an amusing one by Rufus Sewell, who plays his villainous role as a Hispanic Christopher Walken, some imaginative PG - rated methods of disposing of the bad guys and a number of rather audacious parallels to contemporary politics and warfare place this clearly in the «guilty pleasure» category; like the original, it's notably longer than it has any right to be (perhaps Steven Spielberg executive producing both of them is a factor?)
Perhaps in an effort to shake his typical «good guy» role, Jason Bateman plays a foul - mouthed asshole in his directorial debut Bad Words.
But after decades doing the same thing andseeing all the glory go to Felix, Ralph decides he's tired of playing the role of a bad guy.
Barry (Bill Hader), having already murdered his Marine friend Chris (Chris Marquette) to keep him from turning himself into the police over their roles in the gunfight with the Bolivian cartel members, got even further away from his self - justified delusion of only killing «bad guys
Liam Neeson is retiring from tough - guy roles, which means this train - bound conspiracy thriller is your last chance to see Hollywood's gruffest action star beating up bad guys.
Freeman is the one that brings more to his role than the script mandates, as he is a bad guy, but not evil, only seeing his role as an assassin - for - hire as a job rather than a pleasure.
In any case, the confusion gives the talented McGregor little to work with in a rare bad - guy role.
Though DiCaprio is a lot of fun to watch in the role (relishing the chance to play the bad guy for once), and Samuel L. Jackson earns some laughs as Candie's Uncle Tom - like house servant, it drags on for too long, and that's coming from someone who usually welcomes Tarantino's tendency towards excess.
Mahershala Ali talks about his upcoming role as Cottonmouth in Netflix's Luke Cage, stating that he is not the typical bad guy.
This actor was very irritated at the Toronto press conference for Downsizing, on being asked about «bad guy» roles, but the truth is that this performance is a bit of a one - note turn.
Yet Rahim kept Hollywood at arm's length, turning down a slew of movie roles that would've called on him to play the two - dimensional bad guy, usually the Arab terrorist.
He handles the role well, even if his character is just another bad guy to get shot.
Continuing the trend of hiring slightly over-qualified actors to appear in (typically) one - off villain roles, Marvel is reportedly in talks with Ben Mendelsohn to play the bad guy in Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck's Captain Marvel movie.
While Wick isn't an especially demanding character and the role plays to Reeves» strengths — another steely, controlled character — Reeves fits the part perfectly and he offers up enough to make you care about Wick besides his jaw - dropping ways of killing bad guys.
Pryce has always been good at playing the bad guy (Tomorrow Never Dies, The Brothers Grimm, Ronin), yet this is the kind of script that allows him to have some fun with the role.
Burr is known for appearing in such movies as Date Night, The Heat, Stand Up Guys, Walk Of Shame and his TV role in Breaking Bad.
Even the questionable casting of Gerard Butler pays off, as he plays the bloodthirsty bad guy with all the arrogance and gusto he usually brings to his heroic roles.
Players take up the role of one of four colored knights to retrieve a gigantic power crystal from a generic evil bad guy in up to four player co-op.
But a wobbly finale doesn't detract from all the other wonderful things about this film, such as the performances from Kirsten Dunst and Sam Elliott in supporting roles, and Adam Driver's unexpectedly sympathetic «bad guy».
At the film's recent press day in Los Angeles, the 31 - year - old Brit revealed why he's excited to explore new parts, what attracted him to play a bad guy that's a victim, his love of noirish 70's thrillers like «Klute,» «Dirty Harry,» and «The Conversation,» how he worked closely with director Scott Frank to tap into the darkness of his character, how music helped him prepare for his role in «The Guest,» why family is hugely important to him, and how 2014 has been a breakout year that's allowed him to work with a number of his childhood heroes including Liam Neeson, Ben Stiller, Adam Sandler and John Travolta.
It's very unusual to see Carell in the «bad guy» role, but once you accept it, his lines and lies cut through each scene.
Dominic Cooper was going to play the lead role, with Gary Oldman as the bad guy and Amber Heard as the female lead.
The actor, a frequent bad guy, gets to play with arguably the most sympathetic role, and he's heartbreaking, a man used up and discarded by the country he loves and the men he served with.
Morgan unintentionally plays his role as if his 30 Rock character Tracy Jordan were playing it; as you might imagine, this results in a number of isolated funny moments (Paul telling a bad guy, «You're a nincompoop — you know that, right?»)
The action does falter a bit toward the end when McTiernan reveals he's making a popcorn movie after all, as he opts for a few clichés and moments of crowd - pleasing formula antics, letting the supporting characters have a role in clobbering a bad guy or two.
It's too bad that her role peaks when she mouths double - entendres to Jonah Hill as the studio's most reliable go - to guy — or fall guy.
Patrick Wilson is incredible in this role — playing a superhero who is insecure, depressed and impotent, except when he needs to beat up bad guys.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z