Sentences with phrase «first part of the film»

(An excerpt from the completed first part of the film can be seen here.)
The first part of the film covers the difficulties teenaged Ken (Noah Thomas) has at a church summer camp run the the Seventh Day Adventists; he is not «with the program,» and consistently asks heretical questions during prayer meetings.
For the first part of the film, he is a hot - tempered torturer.
In the first part of the film — constituting less...
In the first part of the film, she can only talk about the guilt she feels about not spending enough time with her struggling artist husband.
«The first part of the film, which is the most mysterious part, certainly owes much to not only film noir but the whole German Brechtian theatre — some of our night scenes and our action scenes are very contrasty.
Much of the first part of the film has them acting out, whether it's drinking beer, running down a skateboarder who egged them, or engaging in raunchy humor.
The first part of the film focuses on the accident itself.
Anyway, the first part of the film is about George dealing with fame and mortality and Ira discovering the essential emptiness of immense wealth and notoriety without the love of a good woman.
I hate when Carter's honorarium «Dotar Sojat» is translated as Jeddak Tars Tarkas's (Willem Dafoe) «right arm» (another term for «bitch» after spending the first part of the film being called a virgin queen) instead of «the surnames of the two warrior chieftains whose metal I had taken.»
In contrast with the first part of the film, this segment is glossy, crisp and vibrant; it's such a massive blast and it's so immersive, it makes you feel like you're a part of the audience, or at least wish you had been.
The first part of the film introduces us to 5 year old Saroo (a bright - eyed and energetic Sunny Pawar) and his beloved and protective older brother Guddu (Abhishek Bharate).
I enjoyed the first part of the film, even as it seemed as if writer / director Richard Curtis was laboring to repeat his success with «Love Actually» from a decade ago.
«It's got different stakes, different things happen, some pretty tragic, dark shit happens in the first part of the film, in the beginning, and the rest of the film is kind of dealing with that, so that's interesting.
The tone of the first part of the film ventures into the realm of sex comedy, whether it be Clara's befuddlement at the inability of a ruler to measure her husband's «stature» or the expression of shock and amusement students show at a series of photographs showing an up - close look at intercourse (how these passed the MPAA untouched is surprising but encouraging; maybe they aren't as prudish as we thought).
The first part of the film allows us to get a real feel for both Tracy and Brooke, but it's the change of pace that occurs when the setting hits a house in the wealthy area of Connecticut that is most startling.
So in the first parts of the film, it is very violent and I had her break the fourth wall so she's talking to us and you can see how she's disassociated herself from it and she's almost numb to it.
The last part of the film works juxtaposed against the first part of the film, but it's a more conventional... It becomes slightly more conventional.
I'm more attracted to the first part of the film than I am the last part of the film.
This first part of the film, as well as playing a tribute to old Hollywood in the vein of Café Society or Hail, Caesar!
The first part of this film acts as a prequel with a look into what happened with Ravenna before Snow White came into the picture.
The first part of the film is actually typical of early Arnie, full of the usual 80s suspects such as Bill Duke, Sonny Landham and fellow Governor Jesse Ventura who were all stalwarts of the bone headed action movies of the time.
The first part of the film sets up Eric Bana's mission.
The first part of the film (actually, the entire movie) contains a great deal of narration, and although I haven't read the book, I imagine that these lines come directly from the novel.
The first part of the film deals with Simon's brush with cancer.
Also, correct me if I'm mistaken — there was a bit of continuity issue on the first part of the film.
The first part of his film series is shown parallel at n.b.k in the exhibition History is a Warm Gun.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z