Sentences with phrase «many scenes set»

In reality, a scene set on farmers» fields across the country should show that a great deal of agricultural work in Canada is done by racialized minorities, both Canadian and temporary foreign workers.
Speaking in the diary room in scenes set to air Friday night, she added: «I was very disappointed to lose Amanda tonight.
The transport is ritual, ceremonial, an amalgam of metaphor and reality, image and imagination, process and procession, text and scene set, script and silence, witness and participation — theater, «sacred theater,» indeed.
I love the scene you set up with showing your blackberry picking adventures.
Hands - on learning experiences take place in a street scene setting with a General Store, a Dress Shop, a Photographer's Studio, a Ride - a-Pony station and much more.
Jan 04,2016... THE NEW WILL SMITH caper, Focus, includes a scene set at the Super Bowl.
In a scene set up like a storybook ending, Granite Bay senior Dominic Scotti took a short pass and nailed the game - winning goal with mere seconds left in double overtime to beat previously - undefeated Jesuit in the Sac - Joaquin Section Division I finals on Nov. 16 at Cosumnes Oaks High School in Elk Grove.
Outside the perimeter of a Nativity scene set up at North School Park, the Arlington Heights Park District declares that the agency does not «sponsor, finance or endorse» the «Constitutionally protected free speech.»
The 6,000 - word piece, by Chris Smith, opens with a scene set at an early March meeting where the governor apparently wowed a crowd of «left - leaning lunchers» with tales of his «New Democratic brand» and his on - time budgets, something Mr. Smith described as «a vivid illustration of the genius and expediency of the Andrew Cuomo method.»
Musser: So, I bring up those other examples as it is just historical, like scene setting to this, but string theory has similar consequences in terms of bringing things together and then opening our eyes to new things.
In the area pictured below, our theme was, «I'll be home for Christmas, with the scene set in a living room with vintage luggage, all cozy and warm.
I spent all last week behind the scenes setting up the shopping cart system, setting up the sales pages and testing it out.
J.Crew premiered the first of their new behind - the - scenes set - in - Italy mini-documentary se
It's no secret that, aside from those gratuitous teenage sex scenes set to One Republic and Blake Lively's cleavage, the best part of Gossip Girl was Blair Waldorf's headbands.
The gameplay also hits a high note in this episode with several escape and combat scenes set to more classic songs from Peter Quill's mix tape.
For now, I'll just note that even the scene set in a white - on - white Kubrick - style limbo seems awfully beige.)
It's a hilarious premise and the early scenes setting it all up are priceless.
An early, before - the - fall scene set in the kitchen is remarkably lovely for the way it simply records the way they respond and engage in routine, the familiarity with which they make food, use the sink, and their comfortable body language in each other's company.
The movie takes place in 2044 and 2074, both of which look like plausible variations of the American present, and then there are a few scenes set in a futuristic Shanghai.
A scene set at the diner where LaVona works draws sparks between Robbie and Janney.
After a prologue, which provides background, context, and an establishing scene set in 1992, the action shifts to the modern - day.
It's a stirring sequence that's heightened by Holbrook's engaging, downright poignant performance, with the film's compulsively watchable atmosphere perpetuated by the initial scenes set within the past - as Lawrence does a nice job of infusing such moments with a melodramatic and suitably old - fashioned feel that proves impossible to resist.
And the execution of these ideas, at least at first glance, appears tp be very similar, with plenty of action scenes set to popular music and our villain having a misplaced sense of ambition and moral outrage.
That scene sets the stage for the plot of the film, which surprisingly, takes place over a very concentrated point in time — only a month, really — when the Civil War was limping to an end, and Lincoln was rushing to pass the 13th Amendment to ban slavery.
Due to a high - energy pace (with several scenes set to a catchy soundtrack) and a humorous tale of average people getting in over their heads with the law, I, Tonya plays as an amusing blend of Martin Scorsese and the Coen brothers, keeping the audience engaged throughout its brisk 2 - hour runtime.
In a climactic scene set in the basement of the lighthouse — a cave filled with walls of tar — Lena encounters a mass of energy.
Nothing more than a series of scenes set in darkened rooms in which grownups argue with and lie to each other.
But all this is just scene setting - although, as Markway has already stated, the presence of people like themselves should help stimulate some kind of activity in the house (so perhaps he's more astute than his broom cupboard - clowning activities would lead us to believe?
Likewise, offbeat choices in the film's look and sound add edge from time to time: In a scene set in a cramped turkey barn, a cacophony of bird noise eerily eclipses the dialogue, suggesting the animal chaos behind the veneer of agrarian Americana.
While MNU tries to decipher the aliens» advanced weapons technology (leading to one disturbing scene set in a research lab that Dr. Mengele would have loved), affable but clueless Wikus yearns to surmount claims of nepotism.
The whole party - scene setting, complete with sneering guys with chains and women in brightly - colored wigs, is apparently intended to make you gawp at its carnal adventurousness.
This extends beyond overly - crowded places of conspicuous consumption, too: there are scenes set in wooded areas and on back - country roads, in middle - class homes and next to halogen - lit highway overpasses that feel equally bizarre.
Join Guardian reader Charles Graham - Dixon and suggest your picks of the best film scenes set on housing estates
Sciamma's film doesn't romanticize Marieme's new lifestyle (though there is at least one instant classic party scene set to a Rihanna jam that is super-cool), though it does shine a light on the intensity of female friendships in a way that is deeply heartening.
Indeed, it's thanks to Kidman that one of the most astounding movie moments of 2004 occurs in what is otherwise one of the year's worst films: an expertly shifting play of emotions, from doubt to epiphany, that Kidman's Anna beautifully conveys across a lingering close - up, in a scene set in a concert hall.
The Twinkie - like, overall - clad hench - things from Despicable Me get their own spinoff movie — a prequel set in 1968, complete with hippies, kitschy fashions, and scenes set in Swingin» London.
that relationship fizzles, and in the next scene she sets her sights on Buckley and spends the rest of the film pining over him.
After staging a whiz - bang OASIS chase scene set in New York, replete with King Kong and T. rexes slashing into the frame, who wants to be dropped back into quotidian slumminess?
The scene sets up T'Challa's love and admiration for his father, as well as T'Chaka's grief about his ill - fated conflict with his brother.
Adam Arkapow, the talented director of photography who has worked with both Kurzel and Fassbender in the past, creates an exceptional pallet of colour for the look of the film, especially for the scenes set in the 15th century — a section where the film is at its absolute best.
She's believable, even if the scenes setting - off her performance aren't.
By far the best part of the film are the scenes set in the Judge Dredd style mega city which owe a great visual debt to Blade Runner and the idea of a futuristic society ruled by the church is a really interesting one.
After a brief scene set in the past, we begin the story when his son T'Challa (Chadwick Boseman) is about to take over as king.
The shallow characters might have been worthwhile if the film had any proper gags to hold them up, but the film is built solely around letting McCarthy spitball around basic scene set - ups and hoping the chaos that spews from her mouth will carry the film to the next scene, where the practice is repeated ad nauseam.
There is one hilarious scene set in a restaurant, with a surprise twist that gives Deanna some unintentional sweet revenge on the woman her husband left her for (Julie Bowen).
The odd scene set inside the embassy does nothing to ratchet up tension and only reminds us how monocular this view of the crisis is.
Fortunately, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society mainly lives up to its name, if you enjoy pastoral scenes set in the aftermath of World War II.
We begin with a stiff pre-title scene set in 1989.
Director Corin Hardy and cinematographer Martijn Van Broekhuizen give the movie a dark, ominous look, particularly in the scenes set outdoors, where the woods seem to loom maliciously.
One scene set in an endless room filled with crystal balls sitting on shelves could have been dazzling, but Yates undercuts the infinite quality of the room by cutting to overhead shots, showing the very definite floor.
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