Sentences with phrase «leave the theater thinking»

A good documentary is entertaining, educational, informative and usually makes you leave the theater thinking long after the movie has ended.
Regardless of how it's viewed, you may leave the theater thinking about all that could have been when you notice that much of what's included isn't even put to use.
Motherhood is portrayed as many childless people like me envision, an absolute misery of an existence (I left the theater thinking thank god I don't have kids).
They're the films that are eminently worth seeing — that make you leave the theater thinking about what you just saw — even if they're not winning a bunch of Academy Awards.

Not exact matches

Because his profile shows that he is an organized thinker who values linear thought patterns, the smart assistant would then give a very specific answer including show times, which local theaters were playing the movie and what time he should leave in order to arrive on time.
But with Vickers, we left thinking that perhaps theater really could change someone's life» perhaps even ours.
Just think, you go to work, visit some shops, movie theater or a restaurant — that leaves us with few options where you can look for your soulmate.
I thought the pace was good and it did not have any slow parts that left you wanting to leave the theater.
It's really kept me thinking about it since I left the theater, and for that it earns my respect.
But I personally believe that's what the best films should do — make you think deeply, feel deeply, and leave the theater a changed person in some way.
«I think Elio [the young man played Timothee Chalamet] will be a cinephile and I'd like him to be in a movie theater watching Paul Vecchiali's Once More,» a 1988 film about a man who falls in love with a man after he leaves his wife, which was the first French movie to deal with AIDS.
I didn't feel moved when I left the theater, I left thinking that that was just fine.
What matters is that the plot becomes substantially bolder and more provocative as it goes along, leading to a grand finale that makes your mind reel and ensures you'll be thinking about The Meaning Of It All long after you leave the theater.
Just when you think it can't get better, it does, and you'll leave the theater fulfilled, but also wildly surprised at where Pixar goes this time around.
I thought more about this film, upon leaving the theater, than any I've seen in recent memory.
Second, after the first big twist about a half - hour into the film, you might think you're in for an icky, misogynist torture porn, and momentarily wish to leave the theater.
Even if you think you've figured out where «The Gift» is headed for its finale, the last major twist will throw you for a loop and leave you in a much different state of mind than when you entered the theater — which is exactly what a great thriller should do.
You'll leave the theater really thinking about the dire strait the country is in, without feeling like you've just paid $ 16 for a lesson.
And you would think that, with just a few days left before the film reaches theaters, all entry points for marketing and promotion have been exhausted.
When I first left the theater, I initially thought I was just being a harsh critic (as I feel I always am with movies), especially considering I was watching it at 12:25 the night of its release.
October 27, 2016: Removed Don't Think Twice, Hunt for the Wilderpeople, Light Between Oceans, and Little Men (all four left theaters).
If you left the theater over the weekend thinking, «Where were Ant - Man and the Wasp during Infinity War?»
While it certainly strides more often than it stumbles, the potential to absolutely shine is right there for the taking and the film never delivers on its promises, leaving one to exit the theater thinking wistfully about how great it could have been.
My heart was racing as I left the theater, and I can't stop thinking about it.
It makes you think of movie trailers from the CinemaScope era, the words splashed rapidly left to right across the wide theater screen: Exciting Adventure!
«I think the passion of this production is going to really draw people in and they're hopefully going to leave the theater with more questions than they had when they came in.»
Rail: Do you think your theatrical experience informed your painting or did you take a step away from theater and leave it all behind?
At best people are going to leave the theater and maybe think differently about oppressive treatment of indigenous cultures and our consumption of non-renewable resources and that would be a good thing, right?
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