Sentences with phrase «films people find»

«It's nice to be here, with two films people find beautiful or brutal or interesting,» Mikkelsen said at the Toronto International Film Festival in September, where «A Royal Affair» and «The Hunt» made their North American debuts.

Not exact matches

According to The Hollywood Reporter, the film's tone will be in the same vein as The Social Network, a dramatic take on the triumphs and betrayals of the people involved in Facebook's founding.
She says the lighting in her second film, Middle of Nowhere was «a deliberate decision to find the beauty of black people in dark spaces.»
You can find yourself in a room with people who are financing the film who don't watch movies themselves.
While he basically ripped off the «Hell's Coming With Me» speech from Tombstone... he fancies himself an economist because he found a way to make people pay him $ 18 million per film in which the central plot is about a country or world having to save him from himself...
The film is about how worthwhile art can be found in failure — that the mere audacity of self - expression can inspire millions of people, even if it's for reasons you didn't expect or intend.
«In some of these cases, the people releasing these films or cartoons are trying to make a statement about free speech, which is fair enough,» says Bergen, referring to the film and other provocative recent depictions of Mohammed, Islam's founding prophet.
If you look at some TV film of some of the events, you'll see young people talking together, or dozing off, or trying to find shade from the sun, or drinking water, or walking off in search of some necessity.
Founded in 1998 by the creators of the Academy Award - winning short film TREVOR, The Trevor Project is the leading national organization providing crisis intervention and suicide prevention services to LGBTQ young people (ages 13 - 24).
Creative and dynamic religious forces are finding their expression not in the context of the organized church, but in film, literature, and the arts, and also in some aspects of science and industry, where people are seeking ways to give institutional expression to their basic religious concerns while at the same time rejecting alliances with institutional religion.
Gibson said that the new edition of the film would appeal to people who «want to take your Aunt Martha or Uncle Harry» to see it but who would find the first version too intense.
I find it fascinating when writers and directors and even producers of films about real people in the Bible read into what the people were like and how they fill in the gaps of the dialog, some I like, others I disagree with, but it allows me to put flesh and blood on their bones.
Along with Laurentine ten Bosch, James founded Food Matters, giving people the tools (films, books, website, TV) to take charge of...
Along with James Colquhoun, Laurentine founded Food Matters, giving people the tools (films, books, website, TV) to take charge of...
Along with Laurentine ten Bosch, James founded Food Matters, giving people the tools (films, books, website, TV) to take charge of...
I did not shoot or edit it, but found people along the way, through my networks, to help in making the film.
Because many of the social cues are subtle — people discussing art films or books with intellectual vigor, for instance — Lamb says finding a way to fit in to a culture that comes with its own set of rules can sometimes be confusing.
Similarly, Brulin found that cinematherapy helped increase participants» motivation to change as they viewed films about people overcoming similar issues.
In keeping with these earlier findings, Parkinson and her colleagues found activity in a widely distributed network of brain regions was sensitive to the social status of the people in the film clips, with individual regions responding to different aspects of it.
I find when I mention to people that I watched this film, and liked it, the responses are split into two groups.
The response to the film was so overwhelming Joe founded Reboot with Joe, a health and wellness company that offers support, encouragement, community, media and tools to everyday people.
Along with his wife Laurentine, James founded Food Matters, giving people the tools (films, books, website, TV) to take charge of their own health.
I've seen people online that do it, but I have found that if your water is the slightest bit hard, it's going to leave a film of minerals on your glassware.
According to Beber, people who mention at least one film were found to value monogamy and exclusivity in relationships more, and value emotional openness with a partner more than those who didn't list a flick.
Speed Dating Speaking and Listening Activity - students have to work their way around the class and find out people's favourite films etc..
Rules of Dating is a thought provoking film that may not sit well with easily offended people, but for others they will find that the film is an absolutely compelling movie.
I know they're there and that many people love them, but I've found other modern fantasy film franchises much more investable.
I would not recommend this film to most people - but if you're up for a VERY non-narrative film (think two and a half hour poem) about life's most serious questions, then you might find Tree of Life (especially the 2nd act) one of the most
So I understand why Dirty Harry was made, and I understand why people like it, but America was founded on a combination of communitarian and individualist values, a fact the film elides.
The whole film consists of the heroes running around African desert whilst being shot at by various people really, there is a silly plot about trying to find a buried American civil war ironclad warship and also a plot about stopping most of the African water supply getting poisoned.
I would not recommend this film to most people - but if you're up for a VERY non-narrative film (think two and a half hour poem) about life's most serious questions, then you might find Tree of Life (especially the 2nd act) one of the most beautiful and moving films you'll see this year.
«Seeking a Friend for the End of the World's screenwriter, Lorene Scafaria, who also made her feature film directorial debut with the romantic dramedy, perfectly captured the essence of people needing to find comfort in each other during dire circumstances with Dodge and Penny.
But she also felt she had found a calling greater even than her earliest wish, to be the first black American woman to play classical piano at Carnegie Hall: «I could sing to help my people,» she says in the film, «and that became the mainstay of my life.»
I'm not saying that either of these are great or mind - blowing, but the film finds a good balance between the two that, I think, is really hard to achieve for a lot of people.
The storytelling either lazes out something awful or tries much too hard, hammering on and on with its themes, a couple of which are very problematic, for although the aforementioned themes about misunderstanding people and trying to find a better path in life are reasonably worthy, there are underlining themes about the benefits of taking advantage of the vulnerable, and about running away from certain conflicts that are just about offensive, that is, when you look deep enough into this film to spots its sorry intentions.
Levinson has a deft touch with ordinary people and places, and the film's early scenes, especially, take care of business in a satisfying, sideways fashion, developing character with exposition and finding every avenue for real - world humor.
Synopsis: In a film that plays with the idea of straightforward storytelling, a group of troubled people find that they are linked in unpredictable ways.
I liked that there wasn't much background to the characters, so found this feature unnecessary, but they are well done and voiced by the cast member who played the relevant role in the film, so I'm sure a lot of people will dig»em.
I'm not sure how people who are not musical obsessives will react to the film — it takes the form very seriously — but for those with any decent amount of showtune-itis in their blood, Les Misérables is, I'm surprised to find myself saying, something of a must - see.
We don't witness the Blooms finding Jesus onscreen, but the film opens and closes with Aiden recognizing that, as much as he and his brother used to play at being heroes and saving the world, «maybe we're just regular people, the ones who get saved.»
What's more, there's always a two - directional tension in this film, as we see a number of people simultaneously finding the acceptance of some family members and at the rejection others.
The AV Club has some reservations about the «overplayed artsiness» but finds «a genuinely affecting film, about how people pursue personal happiness.»
The Playlist finds the film «repetitive, bruising and grim, set in a scuzzy part of the world, full of even scuzzier people,» and the AV Club is even less of a fan, seeing the film as «a step backwards» for the director.
Excerpts from the note read — «I am struggling to find the words to express my gratitude at this moment, but I will try... Deep down we all hoped that people would come to see a film about a fictional country on the continent of Africa, made up of a cast of people of African descent.
People usually say the book is better, or read the book first, but if you've made it to the film's release as I had, save the visit to the library till afterwards when you'll be dying to find out more anyway.
Though it isn't as laugh - out - loud funny as you might expect from a film starring a Seinfeld - alum, Enough Said still emerges as a warm and insightful romantic comedy that sees its characters as flawed but well - meaning people looking for happiness in their interactions with others, but ultimately finding it within themselves.
For Faces by a Person Unknown Paolo Gioli re-photographed footage from a turn of the 20th century film he had found in 1972, using the same camera the original footage was likely shot on.
Director Sharon Maguire, and screenwriters Helen Fielding and Emma Thompson have pulled together a heartfelt and humorous film that empowers all to follow their ambitions, and never give up on finding that one person to spend the rest of your life with.
That film followed a black couple wandering the streets of San Francisco after a one - night stand, pondering the gentrifying city and whether people of color could still find a place in it.
As the film started to elicit gasps Ramsay started to relax — the 2000 - person theater eventually breaking into a seven - minute standing ovation at the film's end — she had found a way not only to capture that storm of explosions going on in Joe's head, she had found a way to engage an audience in his story.
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