Sentences with phrase «film captures»

This film captures and evokes nourishing and afflictive emotions in the viewer, offers insight into what is best and worst about human beings, and highlights the persevering effort, adversity, and triumph of the human spirit.
Gregory Colbert's Ashes and Snow feature film captures extraordinary moments of contact between people and animals as seen through the lens of the artist's camera on more than thirty expeditions to some of the earth's most remote places.
Shot in black and white super-8 the film captures the gritty look and sound of the music scene during that era.
This film captures these paradoxes perfectly.
The film captures the spirit of the place (I want to get around town in a little motorboat!)
In a curious visual representation of the world's biggest female photographer right now, the film captures the relationship between the artist and Paul H - O, the New York art scene fixture and the host of the public access show GalleryBeat, popular in the 1990s.
Told entirely through a largely - unseen trove of archival footage, the film captures the pageantry, pathos, and charisma that followed the 40th President from Hollywood to the nation's capital.
The film captures Grande cretto as an experiential work of art filled with a sense of place and history.
The grainy, pieced - together film captures the area with all its grit and beauty.
Mixing footage shot in San Francisco and at the artist's Woodstock studio, this film captures Guston at work — and speaking candidly about his philosophy of painting and life.
«The American continent offers great diversity, great beauty and great adventure - the film captures this spirit through The Luxury Collection's exceptional destinations.»
Listen in as Marcie and Lovey welcome producer Taran Davies to the show to talk about his new 3D live - action movie for IMAX, Superpower Dogs This innovative film captures the magic of working dogs across the globe.
What's more, the short film captures the P1 actually carving the track, proving that it's just as at home on the circuit as it is inside a collector's garage.
Kaufman's film captures both hope and despair, and it's hard to imagine the former prevailing.
This film captures the children's experience in their own words, giving them a useful record of their day, which they can use in their follow - up activities in the classroom.
Each story is inspirational, and the film captures them intimately.
Student feedback has indicated that the film captures the culture that exists.
Based on the popular 1936 children's book «The Story of Ferdinand,» by Munro Leaf and illustrated by Robert Lawson, the Blue Sky Studios animated film captures the essence of its source material, which is still read in elementary schools today.
Fresh, funny, original, and energetic, director Sean Baker «s film captures the seedy, gritty streets of Hollywood... [it's] a breath of fresh air in an indie landscape that often tends to focus on #WhitePeopleProblems... Utilizing underseen subjects, he captures their world in a thoughtful and artful way, and it also happens to be a damn fun ride.»
Writer / director Philip Ridley has a fascinating imagination, and his film captures your attention from its opening moments.
The film captures, miraculously, in its performances and its images, a profound sense of loss, both for what was and for what will never be.
Debuting on DVD and Blu - ray September 13, 2011 from Magnolia Home Entertainment, the critically - acclaimed film captures O'Brien's answer to a contractual stipulation that banned his appearance on television, radio and the internet for six months following his last show.
As we said, a century of war movies have prepared us for the big beats, but it's the way the film captures beautifully, painfully specific moments that makes it distinctive.
The film captures the energy of a fully staffed newsroom — which sadly identifies it as a period piece — with its adrenaline - fueled chase for leads and sources, along with its playful banter to lighten the mood under trying circumstances.
Set in a lush French vineyard estate in Saint - Émilion near Bordeaux, the film captures the beauty and bouquet of the legendary wine...
Yes, only two Python alumni star in A Fish Called Wanda — John Cleese as upright barrister (lawyer) Archie Leech and Michael Palin as the poor stuttering thief Ken — but the film captures many of the madcap sensibilities honed by the comedy team during their years together.
Pekar literally injects himself into his work, and the film captures that spirit in detail, merging Pekar's reality, with his comic, and of course, this movie.
The set - ups are ingenious, and the film captures as fully as any verité documentary the pure joy of just watching people do stuff.
However, the film captures the original text perfectly.
The dialogue in this film captures the nuances of their unlikely bond so acutely that it could work equally well as a radio play.
Kramer's screenplay reveals facets of a genuinely important personal experience with real horror, and Murphy's film captures a suffocating dread at the sudden merging of sex and death at a cruel moment in history — complete with a climactic romantic gesture that finally, heartbreakingly, insists love matters most.
The film captures the dilemmas and inevitable consequences of ambition, observing the artist in both private and public settings, moving between uninhibited scenes of life at home, grueling rehearsals, and Bobbi Jene's revealing choreography.
Populated by an eager groom (Alexander Skarsgård), eccentric parents (Charlotte Rampling and John Hurt) and arrogant brother - in - law (Kiefer Sutherland) in the first half, before making room for an intimate examination of the family dynamic in the second section, the cleverly compelling film captures attention from the operatic opening to the moving conclusion.
As with The Source, this ensemble film captures the energy and humour of a serious situation in a small village in the Arabic - speaking world as the women sort out their narrow - minded men.
The film captures the young life of Mason (Ellar Coltrane) from first grade through his move - in day at the University of Texas at Austin.
The film captures the misogyny of the era and the women who supported the cause, went on strike and overcame setbacks.
As hope moves in and out of the story with the character fighting for his soul — to abandon hope is to lose his soul (Ejiofor, TIFF Press Conference)-- the film captures every base instinct that man might experience in life.
It is very rare that a film captures such magic, sheer joy, sadness, and beauty all at once.
Shot over three days in 2016 at Taylor's New York home, the film captures these two masters riffing, offering the audience a glimpse of the creative process at its most sublime.
This quiet film captures a powerful tale of solitude and neglect.
Not surprising given Bernstein's cinematography background, the film captures the look of the 1980s and»90s when much of the story unfolds.
Damien Chazelle's film captures the story of Mia, an aspiring actress, and Sebastian, a dedicated jazz musician, who are struggling to make ends meet in a city known for destroying hopes and breaking hearts.
This film captures a side of Americana we rarely see shown in this way.
Although the results land clearly in the mixed category, this somewhat thin, overextended film captures something psychologically thrilling.
The film captures Vreeland's perhaps unwitting philosophical integrity just as much as it drowns us in the exuberance of her work.
With lively, skilfully intimate camerawork and sparky editing, the film captures the players» personalities and the energy of the matches.
This short film captures Burton and Price wonderfully.
In this regard, Aitken's film captures what it means to be on the road, where life is lived as a series of moments.
Combining newsreel footage with re-enactment's, the film captures the horror of the hostages — Americans Terry Anderson, Thomas Sutherland, Frank Reed; British citizens John McCarthy, Terry Waite; and Irish teacher Brian Keenan — as they are held by the Muslim fundamentalist group, the Hezbollah.
THR's David Rooney believes Whitney is a «haunting, richly contextualized documentary portrait,» and Owen Gleiberman of Variety writes, «The film captures the quality that made Whitney Houston magical, but more than that it puts together the warring sides of her soul.»
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