Sentences with phrase «far less drama»

Our student rooming house produces far less drama than our other student rentals.
I ended up using Apple Pay to buy a couple of ice cream sundaes with far less drama.
He'd cost less then half what Talib would be and far less drama.

Not exact matches

Tim Duncan, who can achieve a Kobe of his own next season, came this far in San Antonio with just as many rings and much less drama, and without a single losing year or missed postseason.
The big boys will most likely cancel each other out, so far only Arsenal vs Chelsea / Liverpool vs City / LLiverpool vs Arsenal have played each other, and we have Man City vs Chelsea coming up, so more drama to come plus a few shockers from the lesser teams too.
Not only did the Democratic and Republican contests include candidate competition around the city and state, but the city Board of Elections added an entirely other bit of far less welcome drama.
Do you think there would be far less divorce drama?
One of the most impressive things of Bahrani and Bahareh Azimi «s script is that it sets up scenes which could have followed into much more dramatic outcomes but the writers chose to take the road less traveled and in an odd way, by taking the less dramatic approach, the film removes itself that much further from the majority of indie films that concern themselves with cramming the most amount of drama into the least amount of time.
This handsomely executed historical drama is by turns ponderous and interesting, but interesting in a removed, unengaged fashion that renders the whole far less than the sum of its parts.
Rupert Everett's directorial debut The Happy Prince follows in the footsteps of no less than three attempts to catalogue the life of literary legend Oscar Wilde, and does so with the panache that one might assume necessary for fictionalising his life, but there's a curious gaudy slant to proceedings which sees it not far off BBC prime time drama territory.
127 Hours is Boyle's follow - up to Slumdog Millionaire and like that deserving 2008 Best Picture winner, this drama takes Boyle away from his native England, albeit to a place less exotic and far less populous than Mumbai: Utah.
In other words, this is a far more complex and intriguing drama than it could have been in the hands of a less talented filmmaker or with a less incredible actor to center it.
And while it becomes far less comical as it moves inexorably towards its somber, come - to - Jesus conclusion, what it loses in laughs it gains in profoundly moving drama and emotional texture (one serious scene between Gleeson and his daughter Reilly is as poignant and heartrending as anything you've ever witnessed in a black comedy).
The second one is not bad in concept (remember, no solution is good here; we are talking about less bad among lousy choices), except it leaves the investors as the sole bagholders for lapses that operated all along the securitization chain (it was far more equitable when banks owned the loans they booked, but then again, they could and did make mods without a lot of drama).
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