Sentences with phrase «film he's made so»

The film makes it so there's no way out.
Being the best 3D film made so far it proves that no matter what if you give a tool to a talented filmmaker you will get a remarkable result and while spending the entire runtime looking back at the origins of cinema we're also taking a peek into the future with how well Scorsese takes the format forward with a beautifully captured 3D adventure.

Not exact matches

But the narrative already has the makings of a feel - good Hollywood movie — so it should come as no surprise that a feature film dramatizing Ma's rags - to - riches rise is already in the works.
We make project - management software for other software developers, not documentary films, so this idea was precisely the kind of monumental distraction that every venture capitalist warns you to avoid like the plague.
So here was my stupid idea: Why not make a documentary film about it?
So he made his own pair by attaching a piece of UV - blocking window film bought at a hardware store to a piece of transparency paper.
Some raw moments of history shown in the film are so shocking or absurd they're almost comical, but in the big - picture context afforded by the 56 - minute movie, they make the hair of your skin stand on - end.
Well the picture was made under the title of Magnifico Straniero, so when it was Fistful of Dollars I didn't think anything of it, and then about the fourth or fifth time that they mentioned this film they said Fistful of Dollars with Clint Eastwood, little tiny letters down there and I said - I said oh god, that's it, huh?
But then I thought of all the holocaust films my parents made me watch as a child so I quickly blurted out: «We're Jewish.»
So my question is what is the challenge of making a film that is not in your native tongue or is there a challenge?
You've made many films and then you did return to a Western and in your 60s you won the Oscar for best director and for best picture so let's take a look at Unforgiven, really a masterpiece.
Everyone is wondering: How did a film about a minor Marvel character make so much money?
This point - and - shoot camera makes filming in 3 - D virtual reality so simple that anyone can do it.
«There are very few movies made that are based on management consulting, so I tend to look at films through the lens of what we do: leading our clients and solving tough problems on their behalf.
«I like to make films and I like to ride my bike, so I set out on this journey to evade positive detection,» Fogel said.
So Paramount, in the wake of a disappointing 2017 that saw big budget films like Transformers: The Last Knight and Ghost in the Shell underperform while the studio's would - be Oscar hopefuls Suburbicon and Downsizing were DOA at awards season, is looking to make some changes in 2018 and selling God Particle off to Netflix may be a cushy deal.
But with one exception the women in the film come off relatively well: The cause of divorce and related relational meltdowns seems to be mainly narcissistic men (and so we feel for the women who make the mistake of trying to humor them).
It is here that the title line of the film fits chronologically: but Welles chooses instead to flash - forward to this moment for the movie's opening, so we hear Falstaff say, «We have heard the chimes at midnight, Master Shallow,» before we know just why thinking of his youthful escapades makes him so heavy - hearted.
They love one another, they both work, and they make a lovely family, so the film is obviously about love and work and family.
This is a movie that posits extra dimensions and spiritual warfare so it makes sense that some Christ - followers are wary of the ideas and practices they might be exposed to while watching this film.
Like the forgiveness film «Luggage», that forgiveness is a better way to live, so hopefully we made that film out of our own growing realisation that harbouring bitterness and revenge is just an awful existence.
Christian Isolationism ran so strong that in 1941, just before the war started, there was a propaganda film made to counter it about a religious contientious objector who became a war hero — «Sergeant York.»
So let's say this movie is about a woman whose life was shaped by love of her father; the making of the film Mary Poppins (as well as the writing of the book) is about her coming to terms with the truth about personal love and death and all that.
If you're not familiar with the Marvel Cinematic Universe, this is the 15th of 23 planned films (so far), which started in 2008 when Robert Downey Jr. experienced a career resurgence out of nowhere and made Iron Man an American icon.
The film was made for a mere $ 7 million, and has racked up $ 55 million so far.
So one guy in Egypt made the film and brought it to LA to try and publish it?!
So, whatever Davis thinks, and whatever the film makes us initially think, it is in fact a third look - alike cat!
When a friend's son (who was, so tragically, dying from an incurable illness) made a wish: to meet Luke Skywalker, it fell on me — the only person the dad knew who worked in the film business — to make a call.
But as I made absolutely clear to the writer, I have no firsthand experience or observation of the topic, so I can not speak with any authority beyond articles I have read and films I have seen.
Incidentally, why not name the knucklehead in California who made the film which so antagonized the Muslims?
The approach to making a figure like Oral Roberts so down - to - earth, to make a topic like heresy so emotional and to make a place like church so relationally rich, makes the subject at the core of the film — the existence of hell — so opposite of what it has become for Christians: polarizing.
«We believe that God led us into making this film, and he's ultimately responsible for it, and so every bit of this journey has been covered through this prayer team, and they've been so faithful to pray for all us during the writing and during the production and during the post-production and now during the marketing and PR.»
«What makes this film so special is there's so much truth in it,» Longo said.
Some of the reason is simple math: R - rated movies just don't make as much money as PG - 13 movies do, so studios are eager to chop their films into relatively tame affairs.
To tell you the truth, there aren't many Inherit the Wind fans in Dayton because the play and the film make the residents of «Hillsboro» appear ignorant and backwards, and because so many people get all their information about the trial from that source alone.
That kind of film wasn't what we were interested in making, and so with that said, you have to risk a little bit.
Not believing in God doesn't make old timers cranky but so blatantly breaking the AA tradition that clearly states «anonymity at the level of press, radio, and film» does.
So that was probably the most surprising element of making the film.
In films that make the point that God can bring good out of evil, there is always a danger of becoming facile and condescending — an unexpected blessing proves that it was all for the best, and the evil wasn't so bad to begin with.
I am a young believer, and I just love Jurassic Park so much, that when I finally re-watched the first film, it struck me when the «chaos theory» idea was shown... like «WOW, that is JUST how I view this world and why I am in such anxiety to make decisions!
But this is different, and what's interesting is people's reactions to the film and what they latch onto and what films they say it's similar to is so wildly all over the place that it makes me happy they can't narrow it down to one thing.
And in terms of the film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest what made McMurphy so appealing (to me at least) was the fact that he didn't fit in the institution or in the free world he was an enigma — and Jesus neither fitted the «institution» of His day nor did He conform to the pattern of the «free world» of His time.
Just make sure to keep the sponge cake in air tight container, best wrapped in cling film so it would not dry out.
A long weekend of eating tons of chocolate and watching films non stop (this is actually a normal weekend for me, only on this occasion it's more socially acceptable...) So here is one recipe I will be making again before the weekend, chocolate cake baked in egg shells!
Apparently, this tart was created by a Polish pâtissier, at the times when Roger Vadim started to make a film...» And God created woman...» in St Tropez, starring who was at the time an unknown girl called Brigitte... The film crew loved this tart so much that they asked the pâtissier to make one (or several) every day... The film was a hit, the unknown girl became a world sex - symbol.....
In mixed plastics recycle streams such as this, using Fusabond ® improves impact resistance, surface finish, and processability of parts and films... so the recycled material can be made into more sustainable articles with less material loss and higher end - use value.
Do make sure to cover them loosely at this stage though, preferably with oiled cling film so they don't dry out.
When the mix is well combined gently press it together to make a ball of dough, then wrap it in cling film and leave it to rest in the fridge for half an hour or so.
Walter Camp, the Yale legend who popularized so much of what we think of when we think about football — he helped invent the line of scrimmage, the gridiron, scrimmages, play calls, game film, the center - QB snap, the All - America team, and making money for institutions off of amateurs — fought simultaneously to evolve the game and keep it primal.
There is a whole schpiel about Atlanta's oddball economy that goes here: we're the home of UPS, Delta, Home Depot and yes, Coca - Cola, but also the home of Adult Swim, the modern hip - hop - industrial complex and the pre-demolished look and convenient state tax credit that makes filming The Walking Dead here so plausible.
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