Sentences with phrase «like labyrinth»

I especially like LABYRINTH BLUE / WHITE 5X8
For example, one office is abandoning the open concept idea and now setting up offices like a labyrinth, with walls, corners and large potted and hanging plants separating employees» desks.
The Arsenale is calibrated into a path whereas the Giardini unfurls like a labyrinth whose atom is the ARENA, a space for happenings designed by British - Ghanaian architect David Adjaye.
The Words of Others: León Ferrari and Rhetoric in Times of War opens like a labyrinth.
albertz benda's project space will be broken up like a labyrinth, with winding walls and partitions and indirect paths, in order to channel sensations of divided identity, time, and space, as well as what it means to exist in the shadows.
Yes it certainly feels like a labyrinth to navigate.
The natural phenomenon of carved limestone rock had formed a pathway like a labyrinth.
The narrow paved streets with low stone benches, twisting and turning like a labyrinth, ancient pillars and Roman marble urns mapping out the oldest historical remains of the city, and the most stunning of it all — the tiny church of Epta Martyres («the Seven Martyrs») perched on top of a small hill, seemingly floating on the azure sea... you will feel like you're inside a fairytale.
It might not be as robust as Cadillac's CUE system or Mercedes» mbrace, but it never feels as clunky either, except, of course, when it comes to the maze - like labyrinth that is the hands - free calling and navigation interface.
WHAT»S THE DEAL: A creative underachiever's procrastination project in his living room turns out to be Tardis - like labyrinth where booby traps, comedy, and danger lurk around every corner for the friends who try to rescue him.
The whole movie works like a labyrinth in which leo's character and the audience are rats in that maze.
The caves in Link to the Past were awesome, some of them were actually shortcuts, some of them more like labyrinths and others more like trials.

Not exact matches

For what do we long for when we read the Beatitudes, when we meditate on the words of Christ through lectio divina, when we join with Christians past and present to pray the hours, when we climb Teresa of Avila's «Interior Castle,» when we raise our hands in worship, when we eat the bread and drink the wine, when we walk the labyrinths, when like David we see that the night sky declares the glory of God, when we study the Bible in Hebrew and Greek, when we connect with a glorious line from Wendell Berry or Frederick Buechner, or Annie Dillard?
I don't know if the path's all drawn out ahead of time, or if it corkscrews with each step like Alice's Wonderland, or if, as some like to say, we make the road by walking, but I believe the journey is more labyrinth than maze.
One had a «finger labyrinth» which the instructions said was like a real life prayer labyrinth, only much, much smaller.
The brow is in perfect balance, like a problem of logic, like a visual labyrinth»).
This may seem like an unremarkable turn of events, but according to Grant Castleberry of the Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood (flagship organization for the complementarianism movement, which advocates hierarchal gender roles in the home, church, and society), it represents a severe «cultural capitulation» which, «instead of helping guide children towards embracing who they actually are, blurs reality,» «confuses them,» and «drags them through the dark labyrinths» of their parents» gender - based delusions.
That baffling labyrinth of options, modes, preferences, tweaks, and counter-tweaks, which saw sub-menu sprout from lurid sub-menu like a cross between a Mandelbrot set and a migraine, has gone.
Of course there are stores — more than 800 shops and services, in fact — but there's also a waterpark, an amusement park (complete with roller coaster and a full toddler section), 100 dining venues, mini-golf, a skating rink, an aquarium, and the new Crystal Labyrinth, which is a maze - like hall of mirrors.
A stop into Ravenswood Used Books in Lincoln Square is like finding yourself in the midst of a Borges labyrinth and a Lewis Carroll rabbit hole.
May they carry sacred power and become like Ariadne's thread offering guidance when our children navigate life's challenging labyrinths.
«The landscape of labor is not linear, but rather twists and turns like the path of a labyrinth, awakening great determination, doubt, faith... and love.»
In the Middle Ages, worshippers who walked stone labyrinths in cathedrals like Chartres first turned left, the direction of the damned, then right, toward the saved, changing course many times before arriving at the center and eternal salvation.
When divers off the Greek island of Zakynthos chanced upon an underwater labyrinth of stone several years ago, they encountered eerie scenes reminiscent of cobblestone floors and the bases of Hellenic - like colonnades, conjuring images of a city that had vanished beneath the waves thousands of years in the past.
It is written in the language of mathematics, and its characters are triangles, circles, and other geometric figures, without which it is humanly impossible to understand a single word of it; without these it is like wandering in vain in an obscure labyrinth.
I think with the snail on his head he looks like the man with the bird on his head from one of my favorite movies, «Labyrinth
Finding a winner in online dating sometimes feels like wandering through the labyrinth, hoping the Minotaur doesn't attack.
MovieMan, In Pan's Labyrinth it didn't bother me, because the Spanish Civil War was approached more like an atypical backdrop for a fantasy movie, unlike in District 9, where the film purports itself to be an allegory by having Johannesburg as the setting.
One particular highlight is entering the beautiful snow covered Phenandra Drifts which, like very other level, hides a labyrinth - like Alice in Wonderland series of tunnels and pathways.
And while the story quickly becomes a series of fetch - quests, scenes like the one in an ever - shifting labyrinth, a rather satisfying battle with a trio of Cyclops, and the final battle give it a nice matinee feel.
The Shape of Water is more like Pans Labyrinth than anything.
Like Ofelia's journey in Pan's Labyrinth, it sees childhood as the blueprint for how adults might aspire to be the heroes of their own lives, and so it finds young Robert Ford (Casey Affleck) jealously hoarding his stash of highly - fictionalized penny novels (of the sort W.W. Beauchamp was writing on English Bob in another western touchstone, Unforgiven) about his hero James under his bed with other sundry relics of his youth.
To be honest, I also look at films that I grew up with like Dark Crystal and Labyrinth and for Jim Henson at the time they were flops in terms of their theatrical release, but they went on to become classics that people still buy to this day.
The Shape of the Water (*** 1/2) It takes a genius writer / director (Guillermo del Toro, Pan's Labyrinth) who loves monsters and a creative co-writer (Vanessa Taylor) to concoct a love story between a man - like amphibian (Doug Jones) and a mute lady janitor (Sally Hawkins, Maudie).
The film marks a return to del Toro's earlier work like 2006's Oscar - winning Pan's Labyrinth.
«Labyrinth» has the edge because the box - office is surprisingly strong for a subtitled film and because it is up for six Oscars, a sure sign that academy members really like it.
Like a princess in a fairytale it's surrounded by a labyrinth of eerie tunnels, which heroic filmgoers must brave if they wish to sample the delights within.
Featuring a memorable ensemble cast of both British and American actors, the film centers on a group of reckless criminals that inadvertently become involved in a labyrinth - like plot full of two - timing back stabbers set to the tone of Ritchie's trademark comic violence and tongue in cheek humor.
I suppose the point I'm slowly getting to is that this is what it looks like when all the pieces come together for the great Guillermo del Toro (Pan's Labyrinth, Crimson Peak).
Mexican director Guillermo del Toro has built a reputation on his imagination: films like «Pan's Labyrinth» and «Hellboy II» are crammed with eyeless demons and flesh - eating fairies, tangling fantasy and horror in intoxicating fashion.
Accustomed to hunting her prey in the labyrinth - like Depths, Phaedra has the unique ability to burst through walls to surprise her enemies.
Designers Yoshihito Akatsuka — «The Left Ear,» «Warriors of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale» Kokayi Ampah — «Knight and Day» «Flags of Our Fathers» Jille Azis — «Magic in the Moonlight,» «Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy» Hannah E. Beachler — «Miles Ahead,» «Creed» Bert Berry — «Inside Out,» «Cars 2» Celia Bobak — «The Martian,» «Shanghai» Stephanie Carroll — «Elsa & Fred,» «Monsoon Wedding» Sue Chan — «Gone Girl,» «300: Rise of an Empire» Rodolfo Damaggio — «Tomorrowland,» «Terminator Genisys» Rena DeAngelo — «Bridge of Spies,» «The Judge» Warren Drummond — «Straight Outta Compton,» «Nightcrawler» Colin Gibson — «Mad Max: Fury Road,» «Happy Feet Two» Bernhard Henrich — «Bridge of Spies,» «Unfinished Business» Kalina Ivanov — «Max,» «Little Miss Sunshine» Michael Anthony Jackson — «Gods of Egypt,» «Fantastic Four» Philip Keller — «Jurassic World,» «The Last Witch Hunter» Carolyn A. Loucks — «Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice,» «RoboCop» Chris Lowe — «Spectre,» «Into the Woods» Ina Mayhew — «Barbershop: The Next Cut,» «Tyler Perry's Good Deeds» Alice Normington — «Suffragette,» «Nowhere Boy» Hamish Purdy — «The Revenant,» «Step Up All In» Peter Ramsey * — «Penguins of Madagascar,» «Shrek the Third» Pilar Revuelta — «Exodus: Gods and Kings,» «Pan's Labyrinth» Mark Ricker — «Trumbo,» «Get on Up Dena Roth — «The Wedding Ringer,» «Think Like a Man Too» David Schlesinger — «True Story,» «Annie» Richard Sherman — «The Gift,» «Beautiful Creatures» Michael Standish — «The Danish Girl,» «Victor Frankenstein» Yohei Taneda — «Monster Hunt,» «The Hateful Eight» Lisa Thompson — «Mad Max: Fury Road,» «San Andreas» Patrice Vermette — «Sicario,» «The Young Victoria» Frank Walsh — «The Huntsman: Winter's War,» «High - Rise»
Yes, there are some clichés like a small child singing an eerie song, but they've still got a great hook with the labyrinth house designed to cage ghosts plus excellent actors with Helen Mirren, Jason Clarke, and Sarah Snook.
It's still reminiscent of classic body horror like The Thing and Bodysnatchers, and there's a few tips of the hat to The Descent and Pan's Labyrinth, but the most explicit nod goes to Sam Raimi.
Like his friends — and fellow Mexican émigrés — Alfonso Cuarón (director of Children Of Men and co-producer on Pan's Labyrinth) and Alejandro González Iñárritu (Amores Perros, the forthcoming Babel), del Toro is committed to recharging genre cinema with political conscience.
Like Pan's Labyrinth, The Shape of Water is largely structured like a fairy tLike Pan's Labyrinth, The Shape of Water is largely structured like a fairy tlike a fairy tale.
Berney knows how to play the Oscar game, pushing challenging foreign fare like «Pan's Labyrinth» and «La Vie en Rose» to Oscar wins.
Films like Chronos, The Devil's Backbone, Crimson Peak, Hellboy, and Pan's Labyrinth have inspired countless filmmakers, and artists; del Toro's work has enthralled moviegoers for decades.
Washington and Wahlberg react to bullets and beatings with wisecracks, making their way through a complicated plot like Theseus through the labyrinth, and actually confront a minotaur in the form of an angry bull unleashed on them by their Mexican enemy.
He's made movies I really enjoy, like Pan's Labyrinth and Hellboy 2: The Golden Army (quietly one of the best comic book movies of this generation), but he's made just as many that seem to leave me cold.
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