Sentences with phrase «film covering their eyes»

Not exact matches

The inflamed conjunctiva (the clear film covering the inner eyelid and the white part of the eye) makes blood vessels appear larger than normal.
And the actor's ability to quietly express a whole range of emotions with his body language and his eyes, is staggering — especially since, for much of the film, he's limping and covered in blood.
There is also a nicely eerie special effect whenever the demon possesses someone in order to pose the film's titular question: their eyes darken and their mouth twitches ghoulishly upwards at the corners, like the face on the cover of an Aphex Twin album — or «a messed - up Snapchat filter,» as the group's coolest head Olivia (Lucy Hale) accurately describes it.
A scene early in the film, on a wave - swept beach, was so appalling that I covered my eyes, but when I uncovered them and kept watching I was forced, like everyone else in the audience, into an inhuman stance.
It even has engaging (not to say great) performances, especially from a creepy Merritt Butrick (Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan), a cool Rosalind Cash (The Omega Man) as a cop, and Brenda Bakke (later in L.A. Confidential), who spends much of the film emoting with bandages covering her eyes.
The piece is short and glossy — not inappropriate for the film it covers, but not enough to resurrect it in my eye.
The only image we've seen from Nicolas Cage's upcoming film Mandy is a close - up of the actor's face frozen in a wide - eyed grimace and covered in blood.
Several of the films being shown are ones that Row Three is also covering in a Kurosawa tribute, including Sanjuro and Dodes «Ka - Den, for which there are already reviews up, and there will be more soon, so keep an eye on Row Three for all the write - ups.
Scruffier, as befits its subject, but covering the same three - decade period, Film Hawk shines a light on an unsung behind - the - scenes force, the indefatigable Bob Hawk, whose eye for film and support of fledgling directors has been essential to the no - budget strand of Amerindie moviemaking.
Still, the material will be new to most and the piece gladly takes a pretty sincere eye to production, covering the film's origins, characters, and situations.
As the aging but still insatiable Flynn, we have Kevin Kline, who often had a slightly swashbuckling air about him — and a mischievous, a times mad gleam in his eye; they've dyed his hair and youthed him up just a bit with makeup, but he's physically a ringer for Flynn during the period covered in this film, the mid-to-late 1950s.
Intense eyes, wrinkles of age covering her face and wiry white hair that seems to get more and more uncontrollable as the film goes along, she reminded me of Gena Rowland's brilliantly unhinged performance in John Cassavetes» A Woman Under the Influence (1974).
Extras include: international and U.S. theatrical trailers for Zombie (surprisingly, the American one is much artier); a pair of TV spots and a quartet of radio spots for the film; a Zombie - centric gallery of lobby cards, soundtrack covers, video covers, publicity stills (sub-divided into three categories), and the contents of the German press book; credits for the DVD (whose worm - eye menus are actually more skin - crawling than much of Zombie); and the biased, if thorough, biography of Fulci by Tracy Taylor that graces Blue Underground's other Fulci titles.
«Handle with Care: Working with the Martian Child» (24:18) covers the film's production with both eyes on child actor Bobby Coleman.
In an early screening of the film, teenagers and adults were spotted covering their eyes, laughing, and lip - biting.
Rather, his film — which flirted with shooting in Louisiana before settling on Georgia earlier this year — is just goofy, gruesome, cover - your - eyes - and - hope - you - don «t - get - splattered zombie - killing fun.
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Dryness is in most cases caused due to the anomaly in the natural film that covers the puppy's eyes.
A photojournalist with the eye of a visual artist, for more than 60 years, Parks covered civil rights, race and poverty issues, as well as high fashion, and in 1969 was the first African American to write and direct a Hollywood feature film («The Learning Tree»).
Behind a curtain that is printed with a scene from Disney's Fantasia, a viewing room plays another slow - motion film, A Night in Hell, Part II (2014), in which a flaming man covered in mummy bandages falls before our eyes.
David Walsh, Elizabeth Pearce, Jane Clark 2013 ISBN 9780980805888 Lindsay Seers, George Barber, Frieze, January 2013 One of Many, Adrian Dannatt, Artist Comes First, Jean - Marc Bustamante (ed), Toulouse International Art Festival (exhibition catalogue), June 2013 All the World's a Camera: Notes on non-human photography, Joanna Zylinska, Drone ISBN 978 -2-9808020-5-8 (pg 168 - 172) 2013 Lindsay Seers, Artangel at the Tin Tabernacle - Jo Applin, ArtForum, December 2012 Lindsay Seers, Martin Herbert, Art Monthly, October 2012 Exhibition, Ben Luke, Evening Standard, (pg 60 - 61) 20 September 2012 Lindsay Seers @ The Tin Tabernacle, Sophie Risner, Whitehot Magazine, September 2012 Artist Profile: Lindsay Seers, Beverly Knowles, this is tomorrow, 12 September 2012 Dream Voyage on a Ghost Ship, Richard Cork, Financial Times, (pg 15) 11 September 2012 Nowhere Less Now, Amy Dawson, Metro (pg 56) 7 September 2012 Voyage of Discovery, Helen Sumpter, Time Out, (pg 42) 6 - 12 September 2012 Nowhere Less Now, Rachel Cooke, The Observer, (pg 33) 2 September 2012 Divine Interventions, Georgia Dehn, Telegraph Magazine, 25 August 2012 Eine Buhne fur das Ich, Annette Hoffmann, Der Sonntag, 25 March 2012 Das Identitätsvakuum - Dietrich Roeschmann, Badische Zeitung, 27 March 2012 Ich ist ein anderer - Kunstverein Freiburg - Badische Zeitung, 21 March 2012 Action Painting - Jacob Lundström, FLM NR.16, March 2012 Dröm - fabriken - Peter Cornell, Kultur, 21 February 2012 Vita duken lockar Konstnärer - Fredrik Söderling, Dagens Nyheter (pg 4 - 5) 15 February 2012 Personligen Präglad - Clemens Poellinger, SvD söndag, (pg 4 - 5) 12 February 2012 Uppshippna hyllningar till - Helena Lindblad, Dagens Nyheter (pg 8 - 9) 9 February 2012 Bonniers Konsthall - Sara Schedin, Scan Magazine, (pg 48 - 9) Febuary 2012 Ausstellungen - Monopol, (pg 120) February 2012 Modeprovokatörer plockas up par museerna - Susanna Strömquist, Dagens Nyheter (pg 8 - 9) January 2012 Promosing in Kabelvåg - Seers» «Cyclops [Monocular] at LIAF, Kjetil Røed, Aftenposten, 10 September 2011 Reconstructing the Past - Lindsay Seers» Photographic Narrative, Lee Halpin, Novel ², May / June 2011 Lindsay Seers, Oliver Basciano, Art Review, May 2011 Lindsay Seers, Jen Hutton, ArtForum Picks (online), April 2011 Lindsay Seers: an impossibly oddball autobiography, Murray Whyte, The Toronto Star, 13 April 2011 The Projectionist, David Balzer, Eye Weekly, 6 April 2011 dis - covery, exhibition catalogue, 2011 Lindsay Seers: It has to be this way ², Paul Usherwood, Art Monthly, April 2011 Lindsay Seers: Gateshead, Robert Clark, Guardian: The Guide, February 2011 It has to be this way ², 2011, novella published by Matt's Gallery, London Neo-Narration: stories of art, Mike Brennan, modernedition.com, 2010 Steps into the Arcane, ISBN 978 -3-869841-105-2, published 2010 It has to be this way1.5, novella 2010, published by Matt's Gallery, London Jarman Award, Laura McLean - Ferris, The Guardian, September 2009 Top Ten, ArtForum, Summer 2009 Reel to Real - On the material pleasure of film, Colin Perry, Art Monthly, July / August 2009 Remember Me, Tom Morton, Frieze, June / July / August 2009 It has to be this way, 2009, published by Matt's Gallery, London Lindsay Seers at Matt's Gallery, Gilda Williams, ArtForum, May 2009 Lindsay Seers: It has to be this way — Matt's Gallery, Chris Fite - Wassilak, Frieze, April 2009 Lindsay Seers: it has to be this way, Rebecca Geldard, Art Review, April 2009 Review of Altermodern - Tate Triennial 2009, Jorg Heiser, Frieze, April 2009 Tate Triennial: «Altermodern» — Tate Britain Feb 3 — April 26, 2009, Colin Perry, Art Monthly, March 2009 Lindsay Seers: It has to be this way (Matt's Gallery, London), Jennifer Thatcher, Art Monthly, March 2009 No sharks here, but plenty to bite on, Tom Lubbock, The Independent, 6 February 2009 Lindsay Seers: Tate Triennial 2009: Altermodern, Nicolas Bourriaud, Tate Channel, 2009 «Altermodern» review: «The richest and most generous Tate Triennial yet», Adrian Searle, The Guardian, Feb 2009 Critics» Choice for exhibition at Matt's Gallery, Time Out London, January 29 — February 4 2009 In the studio, Time Out London, January 22 — 28 2009 Lindsay Seers Swallowing Black Maria at SMART Project Space Amsterdam, Michael Gibbs, Art Monthly, Oct 2007 Human Camera, June 2007, Monograph book Published by Article Press Lindsay Seers, Gasworks, London, Pil and Galia Kollectiv, Art Papers (USA), February 2006 Review of Wandering Rocks, Time Out London, February 1 — 8, 2006 Aften Posten, Norway, Front cover and pages 6 + 7 for show at UKS Artistic sleight of hand — «Eyes of Others» at the Gallery of Photography, Cristin Leach, Irish Times, 25 Nov 2005 There is Always an Alternative, Catalogue (Dave Beech / Mark Hutchinson) 2005 Wunderkammer, Catalogue, The Collection, October 2005 Lindsay Seers» «We Saw You Coming»;» 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea»; «Apollo 13»; «2001», Lisa Panting, Sphere Catalogue (pg 46 - 50), Presentation House Gallery, 2004 Haunted Media (Site Gallery, Sheffield), Art Monthly, April 2004 Miser and Now, essays in issues 1, 2 + 3 Expressive Recal l - «You said that without moving you lips», Limerick City Gallery of Art, Dougal McKenzie, Source 37, Winter 2003 Braziers International Artists Workshop Catalogue, 2002 Review of Lost Collection of an Invisible Man, Art Monthly, April 2003 Slade - Hannah Collins, Chris Muller, Lindsay Seers, Elisa Sighicelli, Catherine Yass, (A journal on photography, essay by John Hilliard), June 2002 Radical Philosophy, 113, Cover and pages 26/30, June 2002 Elle magazine, June 2002, page 92 - 93 Review, Dave Beech, Art Monthly, June 2002 Nausea: encounters with ugliness, Catalogue Lindsay Seers, Artists Eye, BBC Programme by Rory Logsdail The Fire Station, a film by William Raban and a catalogue by Acme The Double, Catalogue from the Lowry, Lowry Press, July 2000 Contemporary Visual Arts, Roy Exley, June 1999 Hot Shoe, Chris Towncover and pages 6 + 7 for show at UKS Artistic sleight of hand — «Eyes of Others» at the Gallery of Photography, Cristin Leach, Irish Times, 25 Nov 2005 There is Always an Alternative, Catalogue (Dave Beech / Mark Hutchinson) 2005 Wunderkammer, Catalogue, The Collection, October 2005 Lindsay Seers» «We Saw You Coming»;» 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea»; «Apollo 13»; «2001», Lisa Panting, Sphere Catalogue (pg 46 - 50), Presentation House Gallery, 2004 Haunted Media (Site Gallery, Sheffield), Art Monthly, April 2004 Miser and Now, essays in issues 1, 2 + 3 Expressive Recal l - «You said that without moving you lips», Limerick City Gallery of Art, Dougal McKenzie, Source 37, Winter 2003 Braziers International Artists Workshop Catalogue, 2002 Review of Lost Collection of an Invisible Man, Art Monthly, April 2003 Slade - Hannah Collins, Chris Muller, Lindsay Seers, Elisa Sighicelli, Catherine Yass, (A journal on photography, essay by John Hilliard), June 2002 Radical Philosophy, 113, Cover and pages 26/30, June 2002 Elle magazine, June 2002, page 92 - 93 Review, Dave Beech, Art Monthly, June 2002 Nausea: encounters with ugliness, Catalogue Lindsay Seers, Artists Eye, BBC Programme by Rory Logsdail The Fire Station, a film by William Raban and a catalogue by Acme The Double, Catalogue from the Lowry, Lowry Press, July 2000 Contemporary Visual Arts, Roy Exley, June 1999 Hot Shoe, Chris TownCover and pages 26/30, June 2002 Elle magazine, June 2002, page 92 - 93 Review, Dave Beech, Art Monthly, June 2002 Nausea: encounters with ugliness, Catalogue Lindsay Seers, Artists Eye, BBC Programme by Rory Logsdail The Fire Station, a film by William Raban and a catalogue by Acme The Double, Catalogue from the Lowry, Lowry Press, July 2000 Contemporary Visual Arts, Roy Exley, June 1999 Hot Shoe, Chris Townsend.
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