Sentences with phrase «belong in a different film»

When the connecting revelation comes, it's more incidental than elegant, and while its tale is compelling, it sometimes feels like it belongs in a different film.
The light - hearted tone does not fail altogether, but the sight gags and pratfalls just seem like they belong in a different film.
There's nothing wrong with the first act and those cute edits, except they belong in a different film.

Not exact matches

Anjelica Huston is a welcome screen presence, but her character belongs in a completely different film.
Although different in tone from his previous film, the importance of searching for belonging and parental acceptance is still present.
And of course there's that fascinating moment in which Lucy decides that she's going to erase all knowledge of Henry, a melancholy sequence so well - crafted that it belongs in an entirely different film.
In the conversations I've had with others who have seen the movie, I was amazed to find that, in discussing who this film actually belongs to — whose story it is — everyone seemed to identify with a different characteIn the conversations I've had with others who have seen the movie, I was amazed to find that, in discussing who this film actually belongs to — whose story it is — everyone seemed to identify with a different charactein discussing who this film actually belongs to — whose story it is — everyone seemed to identify with a different character.
Belonging to a different era in filmmaking and a different ethic in literature, The Quiet American is the more intricate of the two Noyce films for 2002.
Mulholland Dr. is never more disconnected than its opening 20 minutes, which introduce characters who seem to belong in different movies (some of whom never appear again) and include one of the most purely scary sequences in contemporary film — the self - contained «man behind Winkie's» scene.
Substantively the two films are quite different — whereas Caesar delineated a day - in - the - life of a Hollywood studio fixer, Rules tackles a love triangle involving two people who really don't belong together and a Hollywood luminary who uses the actress as a loophole to avoid being committed to an asylum, and thus losing his company.
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