Sentences with phrase «evinced more»

They should have got a proper game designer to put all this together and make sense of it all; with a little bit more talent on the design side you might have evinced more sympathy.
Pope Benedict evinced more awareness of this particular deficit in orthodox culture than did either his predecessor or successor.
Meanwhile the French continue to evince more charm and confidence than their Biennial neighbors.
But the untitled canvases in his debut exhibition at Reena Spaulings Fine Art, with their craggy surfaces and doubled, phantasmatic figures, also evince a more idiosyncratic approach.

Not exact matches

I am haunted by having left a man in desperate shape in order to respond to another who, at the level of party conversation, had evinced interest in «doing more,» yet who had created a world of work which did not allow him to step into another world.
More important and immediate than the embargo question, I was impressed by the way that U.S. pilgrims to Cuba - including cardinals, bishops, and many priests - evinced a sense of urgency about ongoing and very practical work with the Cuban Church.
But we can not predict with confidence whether more recent challenges to world security» state sponsors of terrorism and nonstate actors seeking to acquire weapons of mass destruction» will evince the same degree of rationality.
Whether it be Wieman's general appropriation of James's «knowledge by acquaintance» in Religious Experience and Scientific Method, Meland's «appreciative awareness,» or Loomer's more narrative forms of gathering evidence, each purports merely to describe, but then evinces that the description is driven by rather specific personal and / or contextual definitions of what counts as religious experience.
(iii) Ironically the US and German cases evinced against the Pope concerning abuses back in the 70s and 80s (as with the much more recent Ealing headmaster case used very prominently against Archbishop Nichols) show the Church being decades ahead of the game as they had all involved full and appropriate cooperation with civil authorities.
Over the nineties and into the 2000s, Smith evinced a predilection for slightly deeper and more intelligent fare, but kept a somewhat low onscreen profile for several years, usually (though not always) with bit parts in lower budget indie dramas.
His antics only go so far though, evincing a disjointed structure that feels more like bits strung together than a coherent tale, much less one that needed to be told.
There's the more recent trend towards to the romantic («Midnight In Paris») and globe - trotting («Vicky Cristina Barcelona»), familiar existential comedic worries («Whatever Works»), and even moral - dilemma - led thrillers («Match Point,» «Cassandra's Dream «-RRB- but a recent theme emerging of late is an introspective examination at the past and regret also evinced in «To Rome with Love.»
Allen might've used the Browning character as simply an embodiment of temptation, while Perry, more like Bergman, evinces a palpable empathy for her own terrifying loneliness and confusion.
«Unsane» sees the director weaponize that power, evincing that a deliciously disturbing horror pic captured with a phone can be as or more stimulating than a Roger Deakins - shot epic.
It's a bold and clever conceit to hang a film on, and if McDormand's character had been only slightly more human, the audacity of her actions would have rung with genuine anger and desperation, rather than the same relentless sense of bitter self - aggrandizement that she evinces all throughout the film.
Indeed, for all of Assayas's personal attachment to this material, Something in the Air isn't significantly more illuminating about the period than something like Almost Famous, which uses the titular song to roughly the same effect, evincing the same impossible nostalgia for a time when everyone was supposedly moving together on one big bus, so to speak.
Evincing many lucid and extemporaneous qualities, Linklater doesn't do catching up though, as «Boyhood» feels much less like a greatest hits package and more analogous to being in the moment, watching the sprawling, occasionally dull home videos of family over more than a decade's time.
He recalled the awe that the smart set once evinced for the economies of «Japan, Inc.» and the Soviet Union, and noted that Germany's current success benefits from liberalization «that made the country a little bit more like... the United States.»
More irony — only one school exists in New Orleans in the presumed network) The scathing report evinces school leaders «directed teachers not to provide students with the special education services mandated in their IEPs [individualized education programs].»
The car's structure feels solid — our testers evinced not a single squeak or rattle — and the interior more than holds its own at its price point.
Some of the key exhibitors, including Thailand, Turkey, Malaysia, Maldives, and Indonesia, among others, have increased their stand size considerably, and several more have evinced their interests for the same.
In conducting my monthly survey of commercial gallery shows this month I was struck by the amount of representational work on view, and even more so by the «academic» rigor much of it evinces.
It is largely free of the more restrictive aspects of Greenbergian Modernism but evinces a keen understanding of them nonetheless — it chooses not to be that.
I'm reminded of the «Lure of the East: British Orientalist Painting» exhibition at the Tate Britain, where a section grouping together landscape paintings evinced something like this shift, albeit one more explicitly political and colonial, and with its own specific «moralizing narrative of conquest,» and aestheticization of power.
Schroeder is planning more solo exhibitions in this new, larger venue, in addition to the two - artist show next, emblematic of her tight curatorial prowess I evinced when meeting her over two years ago.
Rather than evincing sweetness or warmth, the simplicity, symbolized smile and warm, beautiful palette carry a sinister quality; more jack - o - lantern than smiley face, the portraits explore the potential for misleading and deception inherent in visual signage.
Reliably, the inmates who evinced the most contempt and anger toward gays were more highly aroused by pictures of naked males than were those whose attitudes were more neutral.
At the beginning of the survey, in the 1970s, conservatives trusted science more than anyone, with about 48 percent evincing a great deal of trust.
Campbell: Analogy is generally more successful in silencing objections than in evincing truth, and on this account may more properly be styled the defensive arms of the orator than the offensive.
The insurers said that «many more hospitals have evinced interest in joining our PPN and we would be including them too.»
Rather, the economy will probably evince a «U» shaped recovery, with a few more quarters of growth below the economy's potential — about 3.0 % — followed by stronger results toward the end of the year.
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