Sentences with phrase «bravura sequence»

In the first of many bravura sequences, Spielberg follows Ray running through a city that, in the blink of an eye, has dissolved into chaos.
In what may be the film's most bravura sequence, Isabelle meets the young and swarthy actor after a performance, after which she manages to painstakingly cajole him back to her place.
I could have chosen Martin Short's bravura sequence as a coked up paranoid attorney or James Brolin's final statement, but this is the moment when Inherent Vice gives you the best high.
Never is this more clear than In the film's singular bravura sequence, Kaguya runs from her palatial prison in the midst of a marathon party in her honor (in which her role consists of sitting in a room while others admire her from afar), stripping off layer upon layer of fancy robes, leaving a trail of her vestments behind.
It's exactly the kind of bravura sequence Edgar Wright might dream up if he were high on meth.
It's a bravura sequence.
It's a bravura sequence of flaming arrows, falling horses, and mortal combat that doesn't copy Private Ryan «s famous opening tour de force of carnage so much as raise a banner in admiration.
Not only does that first image knock us out, but Cuarón and company up the ante by spinning it out into a bravura sequence that lasts for 13 minutes without a cut.
A bravura sequence in the middle of the film shows Noah traveling to Tubal - Cain's camps in an attempt to find his troubled son Ham (Logan Lerman of The Perks of Being a Wallflower) that pointedly evokes Black Swan but more importantly shows the sort of unbridled fury that has gripped humanity (compare this to the Golden Calf scene from The Ten Commandments).
It's a bravura sequence in a film utterly lacking them elsewhere, and a frustrating glimpse at what might have been had the unnecessary entanglements been pruned to shift focus where it belonged.
What follows is a bravura sequence seamlessly weaving between past and present at breakneck speed.
Innovatively shot by ace cinematographer Dante Spinotti (L.A. Confidential, Mann's The Last of the Mohicans), this contains at least two bravura sequences that still stand out: the fiery fate of a pesky tabloid reporter (Stephen Lang) and the «In - a-Gadda-da-Vida» - driven finale.
The Post Steven Spielberg's «The Post,» about the Washington Post's decision to publish the Pentagon Papers, features a bravura sequence of a newspaper being published.
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