Sentences with phrase «featured in a few scenes»

Not exact matches

The other extras included are all in HD and feature special tid bits like Learn the Donkey Dance, Lost Scenes, The Tech of Shrek, Big Green Goofs, Shrek's Guide to Parenthood, Merlin's Magic Crystal Ball, Artie's Yearbook, and a few more hidden features that will keep many fans entertained.
We also bear witness to the discovery of fire and a few scenes featuring Lucy, the skeleton discovered by an archaeological expedition in 1975.
A few scenes, such as a panoramic view of The Land of the Dead, «pop» but much of the movie is more interested in emphasizing the Mexican culture than outdoing earlier features.
The story does get bogged down in a few of its ancillary characters, namely Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) and Natalie (Scarlett Johansson), both members of SHIELD, whose presence here is solely to bring up another entry in the comic canon (along with a post-credit scene featuring the discovery of a prop from another hero in the increasingly incestuous cinematic Marvel Universe).
Extras are, per Anderson's M.O., exasperatingly abstract: The cover copy refers to the bonus features as «special trailers,» but one is just a deleted scene of Shasta and Doc watching the waves lap against the shore at dusk (their lips are moving, but a dreamy Greenwood composition mutes everything they say), while the fourth and final, «Everything in this Dream,» is an artful 6 - minute montage of cutting - room scraps, including a few shots of Doc and Sauncho watching a schooner leave port that could be construed as the ending from Inherent Vice the novel.
Not a problem in of itself (and, in fact, many filmmakers would do well to follow his lead, as few commentaries hold any kind of interest aside from the stray tidbit now and again), when the commentary track is enabled through remote or Special Features menu, as the film plays on into un-commented scenes the regular soundtrack doesn't return.
A cocktail party features glasses of wine held by men and women and a few of each drink from their glasses, a man at a party sips from a glass of whiskey and another man chugs from a bottle of clear liquor (the label is hidden), a man drinks expensive whiskey in his office and his living room, a man holds an open can of beer on a sidewalk, four men in the back of a pickup truck drink from beer cans as the vehicle is moving, a man drinks from a small bottle of whiskey in his living room (the scene cuts to him lying asleep on the floor with the empty bottle, two crushed beer cans, and a cigarette butt around him), a man at a party says that he is wasted (implying intoxication, no drugs are seen or mentioned), a man offers a worker a 6 - pack of beer to bring a shovel and help clean a bathroom (please see the Violence / Gore category for more details), a man offers another man a drink and he declines saying that he is high on life, and a man holds a can that could be beer.
In this clip from the special features of the film's home release, seen first on SPINOFF, the curtain's peeled back a bit on a few scenes to give viewers an idea of how things look before and after the movie magic happens.
A five - minute featurette called «Greetings From Bull Mountain» is the standard five - minute B - roll / soft - sell interview errata that features a few additional male buttock shots; «King of the Mountain» is a two - minute music video that splices action sequences from the film together with bloopers and sets it to music (something resurrected in feature - length form by this year's ESPN's X-movie); and nine chapter - encoded deleted scenes (blissfully sans commentary and running between fifteen seconds and a minute, each) are essentially long «comedy» shticks that prove for as bad as Out Cold was, it could have been even worse.
In terms of special features there is all the previous content included back on the «70th Anniversary Platinum Edition» release, which some of it includes an Audio Commentary By Leonard Maltin, Eric Goldberg, and J.B. Kaufman, a few making of featurettes, deleted scenes and music videos.
Over the last few years, Ulaby has strengthened NPR's television coverage both in terms of programming and industry coverage and profiled breakout artists such as Ellen Page and Skylar Grey and behind - the - scenes tastemakers ranging from super producer Timbaland to James Schamus, CEO of Focus Features.
The few decently moving scenes feature her in moment - of - truth conversations with each of the actors playing her parents.
Tellingly, Signs also features bookend title cards touting it as «An M. Night Shyamalan Film» in thirty - foot letters — it's a total ego trip (note Shyamalan's extended «cameo» and exactly how crucial it is to the film: the man makes himself the most important character in the piece), and no matter how beautiful it looks, how expertly its sound is mixed, how funny it can be, and how effective a few tense scenes are, the picture is a first - class disappointment.
In Region 2, where Valiant came to DVD a few weeks earlier, the film was treated to some behind - the - scenes bonus features, including a 14 - minute making - of featurette, a scene progression, recording sessions footage, a television special set at the film's world premiere in London, and the theatrical trailer (something that Disney never includes on the DVD of the film itself, merely as a promotional tool on other DVDsIn Region 2, where Valiant came to DVD a few weeks earlier, the film was treated to some behind - the - scenes bonus features, including a 14 - minute making - of featurette, a scene progression, recording sessions footage, a television special set at the film's world premiere in London, and the theatrical trailer (something that Disney never includes on the DVD of the film itself, merely as a promotional tool on other DVDsin London, and the theatrical trailer (something that Disney never includes on the DVD of the film itself, merely as a promotional tool on other DVDs).
Grindhouse — Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez's double feature ode to the crappy genre films of the 70s was one of my most enjoyable film experiences of the last few years, but I think the films work best in that format, back to back with fake trailers and missing scenes.
Partially shot by director Spike Jonze (he and Coppola were married from 1999 - 2003), the documentary features cast / crew interactions, glimpses of Coppola's directorial methods, various scenes from the movie in the process of shooting, and plenty of entertaining footage of the always great Bill Murray — including more than a few instances of his favorite phrase to recite in Japanese: «who do you think you're talking to?»
In any event, though only a few shots and scenes involving the character are changed from the feature presentation, this is a great inclusion.
Like the I Vampiri DVD, some of the images in the still gallery reveal a few scenes not in the final film, and there's a trailer for the main feature.
That story has a lot of differing source material to draw from but since we expect it to feature a five - character roster with at least a few characters from X: DOFP, that story could take place in the two - year gap before The Wolverine mid-credits scene, where Logan - and this is just our speculation - may recruit his own squad of mutants in the two - year gap before encountering Professor X and Magneto.
We get very few scenes featuring the brothers, and in fact, Cumberbath's best scenes are instead shared with Edgerton.
Each screen features a bank of televisions that feature a few characters or scenes from the film in the background, with another character in the foreground.
There are also a few new extras as well, like the «Worthy Adversaries» trivia game, where you complete lines from the movie while it's playing; a picture - in - picture video commentary with cast and crew interviews and behind - the - scenes footage; and a feature called «Mark It, Dude» that tracks all the profanities and Dude - isms that appear throughout the film.
Also on Side A of this two - sided disc are sixteen deleted / extended scenes, which range from a few full scenes not included in the final cut to a host of expanded scenes featuring extra lines of dialogue.
A feature - length commentary from Moxey is the main extra for the picture, a light and rather literal yakker that finds Moxey diligent in recounting a few dry behind - the - scenes anecdotes while coming up short on important information (such as which sequences were cut for the United States release and why).
Featuring multiple restaurants (some of which are renowned in Bangkok's vibrant food scene), two pools, a fitness center, a jogging track and a tennis court, you can definitely spend a few days relaxing just within the hotel premises.
I do have to note that I was disappointed that Travel in Time featured only a few small cut - scenes as I just expected a little more.
The cut scenes feature characters drawn in a grotesque style, which allows for child - like humour and managed to made me chuckle quite a few times.
These missions are essentially multiplayer matches, focused on Attrition and Hardpoint Domination, that feature a few extra cut - scenes displayed via a communication link in your pilot's helmet.
She's featured in a few sequences where she's not only in peril but it also appears as if players might be able to play as Mary - Jane in a few areas, including one scene where she's hiding behind some boxes while the bad guys move around a train station.
Sue Williamson has been a key figure on the South African art scene since the early 1980s when she produced A Few South Africans, a groundbreaking series of portrait prints featuring women in the struggle against apartheid.
One of the few British artists to be featured in key European exhibitions that defined Contemporary art, such as those in Amsterdam, Bern and Krefeld, Roelof Louw is certainly an important figure on the scene.
Thanks to important solo shows in public museums and at important venues such as the 2007 Venice Biennale curated by Robert Storr, which featured her work «Maypole: Take No Prisoners,» and solo exhibitions in Spain, over the past few years Spero has conquered the European art scene.
Though still relatively young (we featured them soon after their launch a few months back), Mod Green Pod is making a splash on the sustainable design scene by putting a modern twist on the damask, a baroque classic, and you just might see their work at HauteGREEN coming up in a couple of weeks.
It captures scenes of real - life love, humor and determination of the majestic kings of the savanna in a manner that few have ever seen before.Narrated by Oscar - nominated actor Samuel L. Jackson, the story features Mara, an African lion cub who strives to grow up with her mother's strength, spirit and wisdom; Sita, a fearless cheetah and single mother of five mischievous newborns; and Fang, a proud leader of the pride who must defend his family from a rival lion and his sons.
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