Sentences with phrase «loved kids film»

The Nightmare Before Christmas has become a widely loved kids film, when it comes to celebrating Halloween.

Not exact matches

But thanks to Ellis, the film is not at all cynical about love, while remaining truthful about today's rural South as a world of broken families and kids left more than they should be to their own devices.
For those of you that don't know what Catfish is, it's a documentary that was made in 2010 about a young kid who falls in love with a girl over Facebook while his brother and friend film it.
When we were kids my brother, sister and I loved American films and programmes.
I loved the film — genuinely, it's one of those kids» movies that adults can enjoy too, unlike some that make you lose the will to live.
-LCB- Us Weekly -RCB- Cara Delevingne posted a snap from her in - the - works film Kids In Love.
After having a laugh at my expense, we found a suitable substitute and bonded over our love of raw fish and Bradley Cooper films, and I regressed to a high school kid with butterflies in his stomach when she laid her head on my shoulder during the movie.
On paper you may look like a perfect match, enjoy the same hobbies, love classic films, and dream of traveling across the country in an RV, kids in tow.
a great music film this is the words which i can say about Justin Timberlake + the Tennessee Kids great work by Jonathan demme and great performance bt Justin Timberlake is this movie a history is counted they show the people the history not just the concert i love how jonathan direct this and i love the edition i love how justin timberlake is humble and lovely funny smart with everybody i'm more in love with him.this deserves an emmy and a grammy for best music film at grammys 2018 everybody should watch this movie is amazing congrats justin timberlake netflix and jonathan demme great music film truly amazing maybe we have this film in dvd soon i will love if its happen i» ll love some extras yes i will.
Kids will love it as its the rare family film that doesn't pander to them.
a great music film this is the words which i can say about Justin Timberlake + the Tennessee Kids great work by Jonathan demme and great performance bt Justin Timberlake is this movie a history is counted they show the people the history not just the concert i love how jonathan direct this
I still love this film to this day and I recommend it to anyone with kids or to someone who wants to watch a great story that doesn't care if it is in the form of a 60's Disney cartoon.
Definitions of family, love and friendship all get put to the test with wit and warmth in The Kids Are All Right, one of the year's most honest and endearing films.
His mother sends the kid off from the slums of Baltimore to live with her estranged parents, the Rev. and Mrs, Cobbs (played by Oscar winning actor Forest Whitaker, and Oscar nominated best supporting actress Angela Bassett both of whom for their work in films «The Last King of Scotland», and «What's Love Got To Do With It?»)
We love «review proof movies» because you readers already know that (you) are going to buy the tickets and take the kids, all of whom are champing at the bit «cuz the first film was so much fun.
9) Bang Gang (A Modern Love Story) Directed by promising director Eva Husson, this unflinching and mesmerizing French film has early day Sofia Coppola's style mixed with Larry Clark's Kids.
(I kid, but on a related note I did love all of the film's decade - appropriate touches, like one character wearing a red Michael Jackson jacket.)
Love, Simon, Berlanti's first film since the 2010 rom - com Life As We Know It, traffics in similar vibes: Good kids meaning well and fucking up anyway, idyllic setting (an affluent suburb in Georgia), swears saved up for only the most fevered moments.
Stephen Cone is a master of small, carefully realized filmmaking; his earlier films such as The Wise Kids and Henry Gamble's Birthday Party combine an unusual level of empathy for his characters with an unusual combination of interests: love, desire, sexual awakenings, and religion.
But once you've met these kids, you won't forget them — or the film that puts a hypnotic and haunting spin on movie love.
If you love film there's nothing quite like the surprise discovery of a «Whiplash,» «Brooklyn,» «Precious» or «The Kids Are All Right» (among many others).
A heartrending love story tops our list of the year's best films, which also features a kids» - eye view of Florida, political horror, erotic thrills, sci - fi noir, ghosts, grief and communism
The original film told the story of a city kid who loves dancing that ends living in a place where dancing and rock & roll have been outlawed.
The original film told the story of a city kid who loves dancing that ends living in a place where dancing and rock &...
The kid then coasts down a city street on his skateboard to the setting sun, providing «Love Is Strange» with one of its most powerful images (in a film full of them).
He has worked with Marshall in all of the director's films, beginning with «Young Doctors in Love» and going on to include «The Flamingo Kid,» «Nothing in Common,» «Runaway Bride,» «The Princess Diaries» and «The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement» and last year's hit «Valentine's Day.»
It is the kind of film that certain kids will fall in love with, while their parents fight to have it banned.
I fell in love with film as a kid and remain as passionate about it as the day I started acting so it's great to see what inspired and eloquent detectives you are when it comes to all things cinematic.
With their powerful moral undercurrents, minimalist acting and ascetic style, Bresson's films (Mouchette would make an excellent companion piece to The Kid with a Bike) weren't concerned so much with stories and characters as with the ideas they helped to illuminate — namely the continual war between man's baser and higher instincts, between the evils of mistrust and crime, and the virtues of charity, compassion and love.
This film treats 17 - year - old Simon Spier's quest for love and self - acceptance with the tender, timeless, Hollywood touch of John Hughes: It's a classic story of a first crush made groundbreaking by centering on a closeted gay kid.
One take on the project of the film's title is the unspoken social contract that binds these lives: the understanding that they're in this life together, united in their love for their kids.
I saw this film in theaters with I was a kid and fell in love.
Essentially The Ice Storm's most traceable influence after the novel on which it was based (both films share a train - platform sequence, a holiday setting, kids of accelerated maturity, a third - act shindig (where swinging seems inevitable, if not encouraged), and, of course, a philandering protagonist), Loving has real integrity embedded in its modest execution.
Kids will still love the movie for its action sequences, but most adults who see the film will likely be disappointed by the storyline compared to previous installments.
I'll watch this and have my own opinion Im sure, but I was wondering when I saw the trailer if this would have the same heart as lets say «the Champ» (with the down on his luck dad and the kid who believed in him) or perhaps «Requiem for a heavy weight»... Rocky is the obvious comparison but I feel the other two films I mentioned carry a lot more heart and emotion... The fact that people either LOVED it or HATED it is a good sign in my opinion, and thank you guys for posting both sides!
The Miramax library holds some of the world's most sophisticated, thought - provoking and critically - acclaimed independent films including sex, lies, and videotape, The English Patient, Shakespeare In Love, Reservoir Dogs, Chicago, Good Will Hunting, Pulp Fiction, My Left Foot, Cinema Paradiso, Life is Beautiful, Amélie, Kill Bill, Volume I and II, No Country for Old Men, as well as scores of commercially successful films such as Bridget Jones's Diary, the Scream, Hellraiser and Scary Movie franchises and Spy Kids.
Also Worthy and Worthwhile «Keep The Lights On,» «Neighboring Sounds,» «A Royal Affair» (Mikkel Boe Følsgaard guy should have also been in our Breakout Performances of 2012 piece), «The Forgiveness Of Blood» (already Criterion approved with good reason), «Shut Up and Play the Hits,» «Compliance» (captivatingly ugly), «2 Days In New York» (hilariously neurotic, Julie Delpy is clearly the heir apparent to Woody Allen), «Cosmopolis,» «Side By Side,» «Argo,» «The Turin Horse» (Goodnight, Mr. Tarr you sweet prince of the bleak and wretched), «Once Upon A Time In Anatolia» (in many ways mesmerizing and beautiful, but for me, ultimately more in a cerebral way than in a moving, emotional one), «Goodbye Love» (Mia Hansen - Love clearly watches the films of her husband Olivier Assayas; a spiritual cousin to his last 3 - 4 pictures), «Elena,» «Francine» (great non-judgemental direction; Melissa Leo is terrific), «Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry,» «Alps,» «The Loneliest Planet,» «The Kid With The Bike» and pretty much every film in our 11 Films You May Not Have Seen list.
This affecting film about a superintelligent suburban kid and his loving family goes totally bonkers midway through when it morphs into a bizarre revenge scheme guided from beyond the grave.
Okay, there is some charm to be found in this one but scary Tom Cruise has never been worse than in this film with his wild waving arms and fake plastic smile and why is there always a cynical sister or friend that try to stop the heroine in her pursuit for love in these romantic comedies and «cute» kid?
Tags: View from the Couch, film, review, View From The Couch, Blu - ray, DVD, Matt Brunson, The Big Sleep, Children Shouldn't Play with Dead Things, The Good Dinosaur, The Graduate, Jesus of Nazareth, Key Largo, The Kid, Love the Coopers, Secret In Their Eyes, The Serpent and the Rainbow, Spotlight
Yet, against the odds, this film has garnered very good reviews, being called a faithful remake of the much - loved original film (apart from, erm, not being about karate at all, but kung fu)-- but of course something today's kids might relate to a little more closely.
A New Hope (1977), The Empire Strikes Back (1980), and Return of the Jedi were some of my favorite films when I was a kid, and played a huge role in the development of my current love of cinema.
Starting things off, there's an audio commentary from director Mark Hartley, joined by «Ozploitation Auteurs» Brian Trenchard - Smith, Antony I. Ginnane, John D. Lamond, David Hannay, Richard Brennan, Alan Finney, Vincent Monton, Grant Page, and Roger Ward; a set of 26 deleted and extended scenes, now with optional audio commentary from Hartley and editors Sara Edwards and Jamie Blanks; The Lost NQH Interview: Chris Lofven, the director of the film Oz; A Word with Bob Ellis (which was formerly an Easter Egg on DVD); a Quentin Tarantino and Brian Trenchard - Smith interview outtake; a Melbourne International Film Festival Ozploitation Panel discussion; Melbourne International Film Festival Red Carpet footage; 34 minutes of low tech behind the scenes moments which were shot mostly by Hartley; a UK interview with Hartley; The Bazura Project interview with Hartley; The Monthly Conversation interview with Hartley; The Business audio interview with Hartley; an extended Ozploitation trailer reel (3 hours worth), with an opening title card telling us that Brian Trenchard - Smith cut together most of the trailers (Outback, Walkabout, The Naked Bunyip, Stork, The Adventures of Barry McKenzie, three for Barry McKenzie Holds His Own, Libido, Alvin Purple, Alvin Rides Again, Petersen, The Box, The True Story of Eskimo Nell, Plugg, The Love Epidemic, The Great MacArthy, Don's Party, Oz, Eliza Fraser, Fantasm, Fantasm Comes Again, The FJ Holden, High Rolling, The ABC of Love and Sex: Australia Style, Felicity, Dimboola, The Last of the Knucklemen, Pacific Banana, Centrespread, Breakfast in Paris, Melvin, Son of Alvin, Night of Fear, The Cars That Ate Paris, Inn of the Damned, End Play, The Last Wave, Summerfield, Long Weekend, Patrick, The Night, The Prowler, Snapshot, Thirst, Harlequin, Nightmares (aka Stage Fright), The Survivor, Road Games, Dead Kids (aka Strange Behavior), Strange Behavior, A Dangerous Summer, Next of Kin, Heatwave, Razorback, Frog Dreaming, Dark Age, Howling III: The Marsupials, Bloodmoon, Stone, The Man from Hong Kong, Mad Dog Morgan, Raw Deal, Journey Among Women, Money Movers, Stunt Rock, Mad Max, The Chain Reaction, Race for the Yankee Zephyr, Attack Force Z, Freedom, Turkey Shoot, Midnite Spares, The Return of Captain Invincible, Fair Game, Sky Pirates, Dead End Drive - In, The Time Guardian, Danger Freaks); Confession of an R - Rated Movie Maker, an interview with director John D. Lamond; an interview with director Richard Franklin on the set of Patrick; Terry Bourke's Noon Sunday Reel; the Barry McKenzie: Ogre or Ocker vintage documentary; the Inside Alvin Purple vintage documentary; the To Shoot a Mad Dog vintage documentary; an Ozploitation stills and poster gallery; a production gallery; funding pitches; and the documentary's original theatrical trailer.
This is a man who loves pop culture, loves film, loves video games and misfit kids and the 1980s, and Ready Player One is his good - natured tribute to all of those things and, yes, even to himself.
There are moments of personal magic (the boy «talks» with his sailor father as he passes their Cliffside home using signal lamps), natural magic (schools of fish become literal waves curling upon the shore in the search for the missing Ponyo) and imaginative magic (Ponyo turns a toy boat into a watercraft sized just right for a couple of kids), but the film's real magic is in the generosity and love on display from humans and spirits alike.
I saw films with stories about finding happiness even with cancer (Me and Earl and the Dying Girl), the struggles of addiction (I Smile Back), transgender women in Los Angeles (Tangerine), post-apocalyptic love triangles (Z for Zachariah), a teenage girl's sexual awakening (The Diary of a Teenage Girl), relationships between interviewer and interviewee (End of the Tour, True Story), washed up Olympians (The Bronze), two kids who go for a joy ride (Cop Car), psychological studies (The Stanford Prison Experiment), lesbian lovers coming - of - age (The Summer of Sangaile), being a single parent (People, Places, Things), and geeky kids learning how to grow up (Dope).
This is what he's asked to do in Heartbreak Kid, though the film tests our compassion by hedging on the premise of a newly - married man looking elsewhere for love on his honeymoon.
The kids will love it but it is just not a film for adults.
ok, thanks for responding, love all your films and spaced, any tips for a 14 year old British kid directing his first feature film?
I'm not so sure this is a film for young kids, but rather older kids, teenagers and even college students will probably love it.
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