Sentences with phrase «lacerated by»

The building was lacerated by debris on 9/11 that left its interior exposed to the elements for weeks.
«You paint... an indeterminate red; and some cry at the sight of this indeterminate red because they think of a rose, and others because they think of a child lacerated by bombs and streaming with blood,» Brecht wrote in his Notebooks (1935 — 39).
Bradford's behemoth collages, stretching across another 70 - foot wall, with their silver paint over torn - up advertising posters lacerated by networks of fluid, incised lines, are as tough as the street and just as resistant to simple answers or unearned beauty.
Opening with an incendiary recreation of the Detroit race riots that took place in July 1967, this third collaboration between screenwriter Mark Boal and director Kathryn Bigelow, after The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty, ensures viewers are lacerated by every shattered window, burnt by every Molotov cocktail.
London's east end was being lacerated by rain, and Shoreditch's pro-Clinton supporters had been well and truly trumped.
France was lacerated by the wars of religion leading to an apparent victory of Catholicism, but it experienced a great popular reformation in the eighteenth century with the Enlightenment, Voltairianism and the Encyclopaedia.
With entire unconstraint Jeremiah found thus in solitary prayer immediate entrance into the divine presence and, sensitive, poetic spirit though he was, lacerated by national calamity and individual rejection, he was accustomed to go out from this interior resource to face the world again, having heard Yahweh say to him, «I will make thee unto this people a fortified brazen wall... I am with thee.»

Not exact matches

Suzanne Coe, 52, a local pub owner, hoped Ms. Clifford might sign her copy of «Fire and Fury,» by Michael Wolff, the lacerating, if error - specked, insider account of the Trump administration.
But the main attraction is the freak's suffering from exposure «to the cruelly lacerating expressions of horror and disgust by all who behold him....
On Tuesday (11/11) afternoon, it was announced that Andrew Luck had suffered a lacerated kidney after being sandwiched by Broncos LB Danny Trevathan and DE Vance Walker.
He finished by lacerating the «austerity driven by an outdated dogma» which was on offer from the opposition.
Yet by framing these controversial manoeuvres as a suspenseful, noir - tinged thriller, Spielberg forces self - examination when it comes to the self - lacerating pleasures of state - sponsored blood revenge.
by Bryant Frazer Celebrated as an incisive, self - lacerating backstage spectacle and razzed as an indulgent and pretentious passion project, genius director - choreographer Bob Fosse's All That Jazz is one of the most ambitious American films of the 1970s.
The episode of coitus interruptus that follows sets a wry pattern for all of Isabelle's interactions with her many suitors (played by Nicolas Duvauchelle, Bruno Podalydès and others), in which the thrill of initial interest soon gives way to hesitation, disappointment and lacerating self - critique.
The film has an outsize dread coupled with a lacerating insight that allows it to play like vintage Polanski written by James Baldwin, with a menace somewhere between that of the Twilight Zone and «F — k the Police.»
Hers came for playing a revenge - seeking mother in «Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,» Irish playwright Martin McDonagh's lacerating and controversial fable about a small town racked by grief and anger, which also won a supporting actor prize for Sam Rockwell as a racist police officer.
When a flea, ant, spider, etc. comes into contact with the remaining sharp edges of the diatoms, they lacerate the waxy exoskeleton of the bug and the powder absorbs the body fluids causing death by dehydration.
This simple gesture initiated a succession of material experiments that would come to be known as his extramurals — contoured paintings made by rending, lacerating, pulling and wrapping bands of fabric around stretcher bars or panels, sometimes with the additional structure of wire armature.
And Schnabel's lacerating Hope — which thematically works now as well as it did then — reflects a mordant awareness that American opulence belies the existential mess and submerged guilt suggested by paintings like Jean - Michel Basquiat's jangled LNAPRK and Keith Haring's untitled piece alongside it.
Artfully inspired: Inspired by Argentinean artist Lucio Fontana, who's known for his lacerated brush strokes, Chakra says he's aiming for «sophisticated minimalism in the silhouette.»
Perhaps it might be worth checking a few more of Delingpole's sources in «Killing the earth to Save It» which is described by News Corp. columnist Andrew Bolt on the back cover as «wonderful» with «devastating facts and lacerating anecdotes».
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