Sentences with phrase «loved everyone in this film»

Not exact matches

As Steve Martin's character Harris K. Telemacher says in the film «L.A. Story,» when it comes to love, «There's someone out there for everyone — even if you need a pickaxe, a compass and night goggles to find them.»
Apr 06 Taste of the Operas Everyone loves a behind - the - scenes experience — be it film, the theatre or Madison is a town in the southeastern corner of New Haven County, Connecticut, United States, occupying a central location on Connecticut's Long Island
She's little more than a spoilt brat who treats everyone around her with contempt, even her loving father, Considine, the only remotely sympathetic character in the film.
It's really good, deserves respect for its treatment of the subject matter, and is a great example of what I love about 70s cinema, but I just didn't get blown away by it, Maybe I just wasn't quite in the right frame of mind, or maybe I've just seen too many films like this already, but I don't think it's quite as good as everyone else does.
Alda later continued to make his mark on audiences with his more accustomed nice - guy portrayals in films such as Manhattan Murder Mystery (1993), Everyone Says I Love You (1996), Flirting With Disaster (1996), and The Object of My Affection (1998).
The strengths of this film lie in its rapid progression to the discovery of new powers — everyone loves to see superheroes learning of their enhancements for the first time, it's a no - brainer — and in its final ten minutes.
Clocking in at barely more than a minute in length, it features brief, eerie looks at the film, spliced together with famous quotes from everyone from Aristotle to Charles Manson about the overlap between paranoia, love, fear, and pain.
Not everyone will fall in love with this film, as it is rather silly, and yes, quite dated.
There's a certain arch self - awareness in the screenwriting that won't appeal to everyone, but I loved the film for its scrapbook structure, its warmth and candour.
I was afraid to say something since «Made in Dagenham» seems like a film whose story everyone must love or something, but I'll go ahead and say it.
Oh, and Meryl Streep got a nomination for Into the Woods, because everyone loves Meryl regardless of the film she shows up in.
The trippiest film of the bunch is Corman's hippy apocalypse Gas - s - s - s (1970), a groovy satirical road movie set in a future where everyone over 25 is killed by an experimental weapon, and a group of peace - loving hippies goes looking for utopia amidst the fashionable fascists that have taken root.
Lady Bird is a film about learning who you are and trying not to hurt everyone you love in the process.
James Mangold for caring about all the right things in his work and blessing us with Logan and Copland, Refn for Drive alone, Stallone for giving us Rocky and THE «Just keep going» monologue that everyone in the arts needs when they have that inevitable bad day, Joe Carnahan for being able to blend heart stopping action with character drama and Phil Joanou for making my favorite film of all time with State of Grace (1990)(I'd love a Cinephilia and Beyond piece on it someday...)
And in a year like that, you're looking not for the film you think «everyone loves
Perhaps Gore Verbinski (The Weather Man, The Ring) and the crew at Disney are putting in strong subliminal messages like, «this is a good film,», and «you must watch this again and tell everyone you love it» somewhere embedded in the film itself.
With echoes of Gus Van Sant's «Drugstore Cowboy,» «Animals» is a breakout film for everyone involved, a riveting drama about codependence in the life of two junkies who may love each other so much that they're dragging each other down into their addictions.
The pair may have wanted to pay loving homage to the exploitation films they loved as youngsters but, as everyone quickly discovered, few filmgoers seemed to share their fascination with the genre, with the double - bill flopping in the US and Tarantino's stand - alone Death Proof being a box - office bust upon its belated UK release.
Shaun originally appeared in the Oscar - winning short film A Close Shave, Nick Park bringing him to life alongside the cheese - loving Wallace and his smarter - than - everyone - else canine best friend Gromit.
My list of didn't - see - yet shame includes: Eskil Vogt's Blind that everyone raved about, Brendan Gleeson's Calvary which Fox Searchlight picked up, German drama Wetlands, Jake Paltrow's sci - fi western Young Ones, Jim Mickle's Cold in July, bedtime horror The Babadook that some said is the best of the fest, Mark Duplass & Elisabeth Moss in The One I Love, Jenny Slate in Obvious Child, A.J. Edwards» Lincoln film The Better Angels, plus the highly praised closing night film They Came Together, not to mention the Audience Award winning doc Alive Inside: A Story of Music & Memory.
While the movie succeeds as a love letter to everyone involved in the hunt for the world's most wanted man, the film itself, from a cinematic standpoint, is a disjointed mishmash of gripping behind - the - scenes details paired with lousy combat sequences, awkward performances and a boring finale.
Praise has already been heaped on just about everyone in the film's stellar ensemble, from the fiercely - committed Naomie Harris as Chiron's junkie mother to Trevante Rhodes and André Holland, who meticulously telegraph a profound and heart - stopping romance as adult versions of Chiron and his estranged friend / lost love, Kevin.
Steve McQueen's period piece 12 Years A Slave, adds another # 1 spot under its belt, followed closely the third installation in Richard Linklater's Before trilogy, Spike Jonze's futuristic love story, Her, the awe - inducing Gravity and the film that everyone can't stop talking about, The Wolf of Wall Street.
There are so many great films out there... and all the quality movies deserve recognition... but The Revenant is simply an astonishing achievement, and i am not surprised at all it just wins awards after awards.Let's see if it also wins the Oscar.I agree that this film is not for everyone, and many just don't like it.But movie is art, and just like art... some people love it and some not.Like a painting... even if we all look at the same painting, some of us will see more in it.It is the year of Alejandro G.Inarritu, the year of Leo..
I have to believe you had all your family members write concuring your terrible review, as everyone I seen in a very Large theatre seem to love it, I am sure movies like YA YA Sister hood and other slower paced films will still be made for folks like you, its just a shame that someone so out of touch with what the «public» likes is getting paid to review movies.Your like the George bush of Movie critics.
When you talk to East Texas movie buffs about their favorite all - time films, the one everyone places near the top is Casablanca, a 70 - year - old love story made in 1942 starring Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman.
The recent film Loving is about the case in which Richard Loving and Mildred Jeter, who resided in Caroline County, Virginia, married in the District of Columbia and resided in Virginia in violation of that state's Racial Integrity Act of 1924, which forbade marriage between a white person and a colored person (apparently «colored» included everyone not considered white).
The film opened that place in my heart that holds the most profound and sacred feeling and appreciation for my mate, and from the mood in the room after the film ended, it seemed that everyone was in touch with their love, too.
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