Sentences with phrase «in a daze into»

As for John Stones: reports in the press, who are desperate for us to let Stones wander in a daze into the wild and be rescued by one of the «top» clubs, suggest that firstly Chelsea will be coming back with a bid between # 26m and # 34m and secondly that Stones actually wants to go to Chelsea.
She is also cursed with the film's very worst scene where she wanders in a daze into the airport terminal, and phones her boyfriend long - distance, monologuing somnolently into a broken payphone.

Not exact matches

As the light boxes in the yogurt place go purple green red yellow blue, I slip into a daze.
In a disoriented daze, Holley got out of bed, went into the bathroom, and grabbed a Q - Tip.
A few hours later, after drifting into the sleepy, dazed state she was in for much of her hospital stay, she woke with a jolt and proclaimed she was the country singer the Zac Brown Band.
United Airlines is still trying to bounce back from the catastrophically bad press ignited after they knocked 69 - year - old Dr. David Dao into a daze and dragged him off a plane in Chicago.
Texas - born, he is always at his best on home turf, whether as the hazy Wooderson, in «Dazed and Confused» (1993), or as the lawman in «Lone Star» (1996), whereas, when he wandered off into «Sahara» (2005), the whole world giggled behind his back.
It's the accent that has some trouble and sets Red Sparrow into the window, landing in a daze on the floor.
is solidly in the tradition of Dazed and Confused, so it falls into the plus category.
Long before Matthew McConaughey was going to award shows looking like an Andersonville Prison escapee and talking like Foghorn Leghorn, he was a recent UT Austin graduate who stumbled into his breakout role as aging creep Wooderson in Richard Linklater's Dazed And Confused after running into casting director Don...
There are occasions — early on — when we are coaxed into a false sense of understanding, but just as we think we are getting a handle on things, characters and case threads crossover, darting off sporadically in all directions, as we are left once more, dazed, confused and ultimately lost, as we struggle forth, negotiating the psychedelic roadmap that is Larry «Doc» Sportello's semi lucid mind.
I tried to ease up on myself, remembering Pip's resolution in Great Expectations: «But how could I, a poor dazed village lad, avoid that wonderful inconsistency into which the best and wisest of men fall every day?»
You can go into talent trees such as Dream where players can control their enemies, weakening them by slowing them or putting them in a daze.
The photographs come into recognition; appealing, seductive half - dreams, yet they retain all the transitory vulnerability of humans dazed in their reality.
Nearly six years ago, after a long day of wandering Chelsea in a daze, I walked into 303 Gallery looking for a good painting show and instead had my first Aitken encounter.
2012 «Light Darkness and Shadow: Art and the Meaning of Life», Huffpost Culture, 11 December «Review: Tim Noble & Sue Webster Nihilistic Optimistic, Blain Southern», Kentish Towner, 6 November Mark Sinclair, «Nihilism, optimism and bedtime tales», Creative Review, 1 November Martin Coomer, «Tim Noble and Sue Webster: Nihilistic Optimistic», TimeOut: London, 29 October «Where to buy... Tim Noble and Sue Webster», The Week, 27 October Amy Dawson, «Art Review», The Metro, 24 October Rachel Campbell - Johnston, «Exhibitions: Critic» s Choice», The Times, 20 October Lia Chavez, «A Glimpse at Splitting, Multiplying Universes: Frieze London 2012 Highlights», Huffpost Arts & Culture, 17 October «Arts Agenda: The cultural highlights you have to see», I Newspaper, 16 October «Tim Noble and Sue Webster exhibition: We and Our Shadows», Evening Standard, 16 October Rob Alderson, «Amazing Silhouette Sculptures by Tim Noble and Sue Webster on show in London», It» s Nice That, 16 October Waldemar Januszczak, «Magic Lurks in the Shadows», The Sunday Times, 14 October Emma O'Kelly, «Nihilistic Optimistic by Tim Noble and Sue Webster, Blain Southern Gallery», Wallpaper, 10 October Colin Gleadell, «The best anti-Frieze in London», The Daily Telegraph, 9 October Jon Savage, «Frieze Week: Tim Noble & Sue Webster», Dazed Digital, 8 October Kate Kellaway, «Interview with Tim Noble & Sue Webster», The Observer, 7 October Rachel Campbell - Johnston, «Critics Choice», The Times, 6 October Lynn Barber, «The Dark Arts», The Sunday Times, 30 September Charlotte Cripps, «Bringing art to the Charts», The Independent, 29 September «Modern Life is Rubbish», The Art Newspaper, October John B. Henderson, «Chess», The Scotsman, 18 September Tim Walker, «Observations: Chess is the name of the game in a new London show», The Independent, 4 September Liz Stinson, «Artists Turn Junk Into Amazing Silhouettes», Wired, 6 July «Tim and Sue», Hunger, Summer «Tim Noble, Sue Webster and David Adjaye in Coversation with Louisa Buck», Garage Mag Online, 25 May
In Projection (2009), the viewer is lured into a lackadaisical daze by warm and fuzzy landscape imagery, only to be immediately jolted back out of it as a fist punches -LSB-.....]
Then came Copenhagen in 2009 and the following daze, which finally lifted in late 2011 with the Durban Platform, which provided for «a Protocol, another legal instrument or an agreed outcome with legal force, applicable to all countries» to be negotiated by 2015 and to go into effect in 2020.
On the other hand, younger students moving from twenty - odd years of school daze into the real world will do better to find their way in a broader, rotational exposure to practice and direct contact with experienced mentors in a full service firm.
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