Sentences with phrase «famous scenes from film»

Wojech Szczesny was once again blameless, and made a stunning save from Hoilett at 2 - 2 when Arsenal's attempts at an offside trap were again worthy of that famous scene from the film, The Full Monty.
The University of Arizona baseball team did their own version of the famous scene from this film where the players all arrive to spring training.
In a famous scene from the film The Littlest Rebel, Uncle Billy, played by the black actor Bill «Bojangles» Robinson, dances on a flight of stairs, the white girl imitating his virtuoso footsteps.

Not exact matches

She begins clobbering computer chips with a hammer, just as the stereo switches to «Still,» the gangsta - funk Geto Boys track made famous in the printer - whupping scene from the 1999 film Office Space.
Noteworthy incidents include John Bonham riding a motorcycle through the hallways, Keith Richards dropping a TV out a window, and scenes from Almost Famous being filmed there.
The two parodied the famous lie - detector scene from the film, but with De Niro's Mueller questioning Stiller's Cohen about Trump, Russia and his $ 130,000 payment to adult - film star Stormy Daniels.
Perhaps the most famous example of making do is the scene immortalized in the 1995 film «Apollo 13,» when ground - based engineers figured out how to make a carbon dioxide filter that would keep the astronauts from suffocating — using only parts available to the astronauts aboard the spacecraft.
From the opening scene of pale young men racing barefoot along the beach, full of hope and elation, backed by Vangelis's now famous anthem, the film is utterly compelling.
Possibly the most famous scene in the film (from what I've heard) is where a tear gas canister is thrown towards the camera and you hear someone shout «look out Haskell it's real!»
If you're not convinced, check it the famous Wimp Lo scene, which is one of my favorite from the film.
The famous tracking shot from John Carpenter's 1978 film is now a collection of scenes detailing Michael Myers» home life — it's handled well enough, though nowhere near as effective.
His journey includes some of the most iconic war scenes put to film, from surf - loving Lt Col Kilgore, and the famous helicopter attack on a Viet Cong village (to the strains of Wagner), the surreal USO jungle show by Playboy Playmates, to the Do Lung Bridge, the US» last outpost, where soldiers are abandoned to their fate and the only sound, besides explosions, is the yelling of the damned for salvation.
But while the making of that movie's famous shower scene is depicted along with some other brief scenes from the film, Hitchcock focuses more on the filmmaker's marriage and obsession with his work.
When the Sing Along Songs line launched, it used select musical scenes from Disney's most famous films and superimposed animated lyrics atop them.
Extras: Audio commentary from writer - director John DeBello, writer / co-star Steve Peace and «creator» Costa Dillon; deleted scenes; six exclusive featurettes: «Legacy of a Legend,» a collection of interviews, including comments from John DeBello, Costa Dillon, film critic Kevin Thomas, fans Kevin Sharp and Bruce Vilanch, future «Tomatoes» mainstay John Astin and actors Steve Peace, Jack Riley, and D.J. Sullivan, «Crash and Burn,» a discussion about the famous helicopter crash that could have killed everyone because the pilot was late on his cue, «Famous Foul,» about the San Diego Chicken and his role in the climatic tomato stomping ending, «Killer Tomatomania,» a smattering of interviews with random people on the streets of Hollywood about the movie, «Where Are They Now?&famous helicopter crash that could have killed everyone because the pilot was late on his cue, «Famous Foul,» about the San Diego Chicken and his role in the climatic tomato stomping ending, «Killer Tomatomania,» a smattering of interviews with random people on the streets of Hollywood about the movie, «Where Are They Now?&Famous Foul,» about the San Diego Chicken and his role in the climatic tomato stomping ending, «Killer Tomatomania,» a smattering of interviews with random people on the streets of Hollywood about the movie, «Where Are They Now?»
I quite like some stuff in the film: the famous shot of a passenger falling away from the camera into a skylight has more than earned its reputation, and Winters» death scene is genuinely disturbing.
References to the work of Jean - Luc Godard permeate the film, from the title (although Michell is nowhere as self - destructive as Godard's 1967 film), to the multiple allusions to 1964's Bande à part (watching the movie on TV, Nick and Meg dance along to the famous scene of the main characters dancing in a cafe).
Other problems crop up when the picture tries to evoke other, better films (particularly «Live And Let Die» and the most famous scene from David Cronenberg's «Eastern Promises»), but seeing Sly slink into a Turkish bath to the strains of a «When The Levee Breaks» rip - off is amusing, nonetheless.
Hot - head police captains, torturous and talky bad guys, drug busts, loose cannon cops, some domestic drama, and car chases represent the bases you'd have to touch in order to make a decent rehash, but outside of a couple of scenes of Paul regurgitating famous film lines from cop flicks of the 80s (which isn't exactly true, as he mysteriously quotes from movies of other genres and eras as well), there isn't much to Cop Out one could call a loving spoof.
While Noé and his stars have owned up to most of the sex being real, the film makes us wonder which famous movie sex scenes from years past have been as authentic as documentaries and which have simply created the illusion of that.
From filming tricks employed on the two most famous sequences to a Mount Rushmore controversy, from Hitchcock sneaking a shot at the UN to the much - documented shooting scene goof, just about every conceivable topic is satisfactorily addressed, even the director's paranoias and few clashes with GrFrom filming tricks employed on the two most famous sequences to a Mount Rushmore controversy, from Hitchcock sneaking a shot at the UN to the much - documented shooting scene goof, just about every conceivable topic is satisfactorily addressed, even the director's paranoias and few clashes with Grfrom Hitchcock sneaking a shot at the UN to the much - documented shooting scene goof, just about every conceivable topic is satisfactorily addressed, even the director's paranoias and few clashes with Grant.
EXTRAS: In addition to an audio commentary by writer / director Damien Chazelle and actor J.K. Simmons, there's a featurette about famous drummers and their craft, footage from the movie's premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival, a deleted scene and the original short film.
It's part of DePalma's «style» to ripoff shots and scenes from other scenes and insert them willy - nilly into his own films, and the OOTP guys go into detail on how this radical decontextualization creates an incoherent mess of a film that can't possibly contain any actual meaning, at best, and at worst perverts the original meanings to DePalma's vaguely fascist (or misogynistic, if you like) purposes, as in the famous appropriation of the tumbling baby cart sequence in The Untouchables.
Each week his characters recreate a famous scene from a familiar film.
I just played the Harrold Lloyd silent film on my Paperwhite — you know the famous scene where he is dangling from a clock while climbing a tall building, right?
The Humane Society of the United States has chosen Uggie, the world famous, scene - stealing Jack Russell terrier from last year's Academy Award - winning film «The Artist,» to be the spokesdog for its Pets of Valor Award.
Various locations from the films are recreated, and more often than not you'll feel like you're a part of one of the famous action scenes from the series.
These range from watching a clip from a film and answering the following questions to interpreting a child's drawing of a famous scene.
Can you guess the films these famous one - shot scenes are from?
Among them is «Deadpan» (1997; see picture above), a black - and - white silent film in which the artist stands motionless and impassive as the facade of a building quite literally falls down around his ears — recalling a famous scene from the Buster Keaton classic «Steamboat Bill, Jr» (1928).
Cindy Sherman became famous at the end of the 1970s with her «Untitled Film Stills,» in which she documents depictions of women that are reminiscent of scenes from feature films or television series.
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