Sentences with phrase «fright when»

Give your guests a fright when they season their supper with these glass Skull salt and pepper shakers (# 12, Paperchase).
You might even get a delicious squeal of fright when the kids spot the spider!
They were a right fright when angered.
This is often something new parents worry about or get a fright when they see it happening.
Who else on here remembers when we were 4 - 2 up against the Spuds after 90 minutes, when Calam fell over in sheer fright when in possession of the ball but faced with two Spuds players, standing (not tackling though) nearby.
We have little patience with the player who passes from fright when his partner makes a takeout double.
And although they are very small, their discoverer, a geoscientist by the name of Mr. Tullis Onstott, got a Prometheus - type fright when he first came across them (we are referring to the Ridley Scott movie here).
She has brought her frights when I adopted, she is almost 2 yrs an still afraid of everything.

Not exact matches

She didn't know that I was in town, so when I appeared at the front of the line, I gave her a real fright.
When overcome with stage fright, it's easy to focus on negative thoughts and assume the worst, but Osteen consciously endeavored to replace such negativity with his own words of encouragement.
But when the Rev. Paul F.M. Zahl read several of King's novels, he learned something new about the author: There's a lot of faith behind his fright.
Thanks for the video, though I have to say my rabbits jump in fright and start thumping when they hear the music: — RRB - I absolutely love your dress (shirt?)
Steve Bruce was a great player at Manchester United and had some success as a manager as well, most notably when his Hull City side gave Arsenal a big fright in the FA Cup Final a couple of years ago.
Highly experienced Dalton in Fuente's advanced scheme was a fright, and when paired with a typical Gary Patterson 4 -2-5 defense that was also ahead of its time, you had a team that punched above its weight.
Obviously many Arsenal fans will remember Reading giving Arsenal a fright in the League Cup a few years ago, when the Gunners won 5 - 3 after extra time.
The likely favourites for the FA Cup — Manchester City, Manchester United, Chelsea and Arsenal — have conceded the fewest goals (see graphic below), while Lincoln's 0.88 goals shipped per game are only surpassed by Spurs (after their nasty fright in the Fourth Round when Wycombe put three goals past them).
Before that Angers goalkeeper Alexandre Letellier saved from Matuidi and Edinson Cavani, while there was a fright for Stephane Moulin's team when Serge Aurier's low, driven cross flashed across goal with no takers just before the interval.
When a baby cries inconsolably, appears nervous, or doesn't want to eat, the traditional explanation is that the child is suffering from fright or panic (susto or espanto in the words of many abuelitas).
that when emotions run high at the table, children can often enter into a fright, flight or fight mode
We learned earlier in this article that when emotions run high at the table, children can often enter into a fright, flight or fight mode and, subsequently, turn off their appetite, resulting in not eating anything.
When we are upset, afraid, or threatened, our sensory system kicks into gear and we enter into a fight, flight or fright mode.
«I found that when my babies were bitting me it was because they had wind and when they did bite me I softly pushed them away and said no which gives them a little fright and they stop doing it.»
I remember how much of a fright I gave my Mom when she lost me when I was 10.
They are secreted from the adrenal gland, above the kidney, in response to stresses such as fright, anxiety, hunger or cold, as well as excitement, when they activate the sympathetic nervous system for fight or flight.
The fight or flight, or stress response is something we are all familiar with subjectively when we get a fright, and is clearly a helpful survival mechanism which has been passed down to us from the days when our ancestors lived in far more dangerous environments.
This is the «fight or flight» response that we are all familiar with from a sudden fright or when we are placed in a highly stressful situation.
I get severe stage fright even when speaking in front of a small group of people (I blame it on my voice cracking on stage as the star of my 3rd grade play LOL.)
So when I try a new product, it's always with some wariness and a bit of fright.
And fingers crossed, I'll be well enough to review a different side of Fear and Dating this weekend, when I check out Fright Nights at Thorpe Park.
And what better time to head to a Theme Park than during Halloween Week, when Thorpe Park becomes the home of «Fright Nights»?!
When Carl and C2 switch out playing the lead role in the school play in Carl's attempt to score a big kiss with Skye, Carl's «stage fright» is revealed.
Of all the wrenching things I heard at the press conference at HBO headquarters following a screening of Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky's powerful documentary Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory, last but not least was Damian Echols's admission that when he emerged from nearly two decades on death row for a crime he didn't commit, the first movie he saw was... wait for it... the remake of Fright Night.
And when studios do throw money into a fright flick (e.g., Universal's Van Helsing, bankrolled at $ 160 million), the results can be dismal.
Watch Miles react to his parents» anger and his father's uncomfortable teasing, how a picture book and a bedtime story fuels his night frights, and a moment when Miles wakes from a dream, pauses at the top of the stairs, and leaps across the open space above the landing to get to his parents» bedroom.
When it comes down to it, if you hold the 1985 film on a pedestal, you'll probably be offended that they even considered remaking Fright Night.
We were dubious when this remake of the classic suburban fright flick was announced — it looked like just another cheap Hollywood cash - in.
It's never a good sign when fright scenes and emotional high points prompt sniggers in the theatre.
So compelling is writer - director Joel Potrykus» unnerving scenario — with its largely ambiguous tone of horror dramatically offset at times by explicit frights — that a viewer isn't necessarily bothered by a lack of basic story information about who, what, when, where and why.
Depending on how well - received Gillespie and Noxon's Fright Night remake is when it hits theaters this summer, anticipation for their Zombies project could either be significantly heightened or lessened.
I think it's because they wanted / expected an effects - laden horror film with jump scares and couldn't handle it when they got a movie that relied on great storytelling and acting to deliver the frights.
There were some great moments when stage fright or, more likely, wonky teleprompters led to some potential misunderstandings.
The first trailer for Craig Gillespie «s remake of Fright Night did a pretty good job of getting across the basics: Charley Brewster (Anton Yelchin), his mom (Toni Collette) and his new girlfriend (Imogen Poots) have to deal with a little problem when a vampire (Colin Farrell) moves in next door.
The non-horror elements of the film are uneven in general: The score, so effective in the fright scenes, suddenly evokes eye rolls when things start to get sentimental, and there's one scene of unintentional comedy where the film's retro»70s setting — another element downplayed in the first film but foregrounded here — collides with its demonic imagery in an honestly pretty silly way.
His career becomes even brighter when you start to appreciate how he refuses to phone in performances in movies where it would have been easy to sleepwalk, like Fright Night and Winter's Tale, which is the kind of legendarily bad movie that every actor deserves to have on their resume just so they can say they were there.
Australia is brutal and beautiful, and Roeg's film is nothing short of a captivating masterpiece that, like Ted Kotcheff's Wake In Fright the same year, suggests that Australia is never more fascinating than when viewed through the lens of a foreigner.
What's missing from this sequence, and indeed from Scream 3's remaining frights (most disappointingly, the moment when an ingenue (Jenny McCarthy) is forced to hide in a wardrobe room filled with Ghostface costumes, one of which might spring to life), is an elaborate and protracted payoff.
Less is more, and when it comes to the Peter Vincent character in Fright Night, someone should have listened.
The plucky and well - acted, if not always shiver - inducing, «Lights Out» — from first - time feature director David F. Sandberg, building on his popular viral short, and fright impresario James Wan («The Conjuring 2»)-- works a clever gimmick that seems tailor - made for the visual particulars of movies: a terrorizing figure one can only detect when there's no illumination.
When no one he knows... Continue reading «MEET JERRY IN THE FIRST TRAILER FOR THE «FRIGHT NIGHT» REMAKE»
The plot twists are easy to see coming, a contrived deus ex machina rescue attempt from Edith's Dr. Alan McMichael (Charlie Hunnam) is preposterous and hard to believe — when intelligent characters behave like fools, in this case charging into the lion's den armed only with accusations, not weapons or anything useful — and the unnecessary inclusion of a twirling little papillon — seriously, such a superfluous Spielberg - like addition to the story, a cute dog, stymies an atmosphere of fright in exchange for what exactly?
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