Not exact matches
I am not talking about the Arsenal fans that have been
fighting among themselves or the Arsenal fans demanding that the club sack Arsene Wenger or even wanting the team to lose so the Frenchman is forced to quit, although I do think a heavy dose of chill pills is
in order for a
few of us at the
moment.
Although they had a
few moments of scrappy serendipity, Sunderland still lacked the pluck, luck and
fight that had somehow seen them through other relegation scrapes
in previous years.
Few were those who believed at that particular
moment that
in less than a year, Juventus will have already sealed another Scudetto,
fought their way to the Coppa Italia final and, most impressively, made it all the way to their first Champions League final
in 12 years.
I didn't anticipate having their help all along the way, but they stuck to it all the while (with only a
few fights over who got to use the broom and who got to use the shovel - whichever was
in demand at the
moment and then forgotten the next).
The jolt seems to snap her awake and she then spends a
few moments looking up to the ceiling apparently
in an effort to
fight to sleepy urge.
There are a
few moments here and there
in fight sequences where the camera shakes a bit but it's much more toned down allowing you to see all the action happening.
Standout
moments, like the aforementioned train sequence, were
few and far between, and that's counting the time Star - Lord got stuck
in a level's geometry, bugging out a boss
fight with Klaw.
However, despite earning the film a higher rating, this waffling between hammy kid - movie
moments and a
few brutal human - on - human
fights will only cause some audience members to roll their eyes on occasion and isn't likely to detract from any enjoyment the film has to offer - especially given the tongue -
in - cheek premise and execution of the plot.
In the
few moments where you are given a brief glimpse at the city outside of your little corridors it feels like you are
fighting the camera for a good look.
The breakneck pace that the series likes to keep means that there's still never a
few quieter, slower
moments in which to truly expand the plot or flesh out the characters you're
fighting with.
I don't mind admitting that there were quite a
few moments where I was leaning forward
in my seat, simply enraptured by the action on - screen, completely immersed
in the dogfights, into the lighsaber
fight and into the adventure of Finn and Rey.
I played through on Uber difficulty, and while there were some difficulty spikes
in a
few select areas, the enemy AI puts up a good
fight most of the time — not withstanding a
few moments where some baddies got stuck on one another for an easy multi-kill.
In the end, I got to experience several really exciting
fights and a
few frustrating
moments.