Sentences with phrase «emotional crux»

The phrase "emotional crux" refers to the pivotal or central point where our emotions are strongly connected to a particular situation or problem. It is the emotional heart of the matter. Full definition
Admittedly, the notion of a «family rental» unit is great, and the undeniable pain of a father who has lost his daughters to indifference is a juicy emotional crux to stable the movie with (enhanced by strong performances from the father and the older sister).
I think a lot of people use sugar as a drug — an emotional crux.
This, of course, was Paddington (Ben Whishaw), and the scene sets up the emotional crux of the movie.
Ego's relationship with Star - Lord forms one of the emotional cruxes of the film while his goal, assimilating the rest of the universe into himself, makes up most of the actual narrative.
There is simply no way to get across how inane Richard Nelson's script is, except to clarify that the emotional crux of the movie is King George VI eating a hotdog.
There's no denying that there's more of an emotional crux in this film, with characters invoking a real history together that informs how they act.
Wright makes their evolving relationship, and their eventual closeness, the emotional crux of his film, which is fitting given that the king supposedly exists as a symbol of the British state and its people.
Moore opens on a pre-credits sequence that establishes the emotional crux of the story: Ben (voiced by David Rawle), an only child living in a lighthouse at the tip of a rock in rural, coastal Ireland, is gifted a seashell instrument by his pregnant mother just before she walks out on him and her husband, Conor (Brendan Gleeson).
Focus hard on creating a book blurb for your back cover that conveys the emotional crux of your story.
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