Like Kathy Bates and James Caan in Misery, the power dynamic is never short of electric, whilst the screenplay ensures that we're
constantly kept guessing as to Howard's motivations.
He constantly keeps you guessing, even hours after the movie has ended.
The equally matched Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike
constantly keep us guessing and force us to reevaluate whose side we're on, who we believe, who we even like.
Not exact matches
Constantly changing his position,
keeping the defenders
guessing and providing necessary back up to which ever wing or part of the midfield in trouble.
As a tween, she should be able to express why she feels a particular emotion (positive or negative) and that
keeps you from having to
constantly guess what her mood is or why she's grumpy or extremely happy.
I love the variety you provide in the workout plan above,
constantly keeping your body
guessing.
The suspicion cast on Cary Grant's character
keeps you watching - and of course,
guessing - right to the very end,
constantly ratcheting up the tension in the way only Hitchcock can.
It was enough to
keep me
constantly guessing, and frequently crashing.
Watching Hanna, it's easy to see why there was so much buzz around Seth Lochhead and David Farr's screenplay in the few years before the film went into production; the story of the mysterious young warrior is structured in a way that immediately draws the viewer in, and
keeps us
constantly guessing as the details of her enigmatic past steadily come into... read more
Every person might be «IT», every person might not be «IT», but the constant uncertainty
keeps you on your toes,
keeping you
constantly guessing and worrying, knowing that «IT» is mere footsteps away.
It's a captivating, suspenseful story made all the more bewitching by Lockhart's twisty narrative, and she
constantly keeps readers
guessing with unpredictable turns and eye - opening reveals.
So, one of the other ways to go broke I
guess, and the reason we all have all these credit cards, is we are
constantly trying to
keep up with the Jones's.
It's a study in suspicion and survival that's made by a script that focuses on the people, not the Thing itself, to
keep the audience on edge and
constantly second -
guessing themselves.
Keep your child
guessing about what you expect from him or her — and make sure you change the rules
constantly.