Sentences with phrase «more dreadlocked»

We saw more dreadlocked people than Guatemalans.
A New Year, A New Look — No More Dreadlocks

Not exact matches

Former Tottenham, Juventus and Ajax star Edgar Davids, who is currently the side's manager, was sent off for two bookable offences and the supporters thought they would see no more of the dreadlocked Dutchman until their side's next game.
Casting himself as a heavy in his own film, Haley gets several of the film's more flowery, belabored passages, though he fares better with these than Edi Gathegi (better known as the dreadlocked vampire in the first Twilight film) as the kidnapped son of a black criminal lynchpin (presented so unenthusiastically it makes the crime syndicate run by Harry Belafonte in Altman's Kansas City seem more like Scorsese).
Never is the irritable insurance pitchman more chafed than when his prehistoric brethren are stereotyped as mere musclebound cretins with brainpans the size of M&M s. And although the characters in the big - budget, special - effects - laden prehistoric epic «10,000 B.C.» don't exactly fall into that whole «Captain Caveman» mold — they stand upright, they speak English, they wear stylish dreadlocks — movie - goers, Neanderthal or not, likely will find the film's primitive plotting every bit as insulting.
We also later get a split within the company (Virtual Self Industries) that pioneered the machines and a conspiracy involving the company, the FBI, the company's former owner (little more than a cameo by James Cromwell), and the leader of the human revolution (a dreadlocked Ving Rhames in an almost - constant, amusing meditation pose) involving a weapon that destroys the surrogate and liquefies the brain of the operator.
Few breeds can elicit the double - takes that this walking mound of white dreadlocks inspires, but the mystique of the Komondor is far more than fur - deep.
Jamaica may evoke images of dreadlocks and reggae music, but there's more to the island than pop culture suggests.
As the name implies, it is run by dreadlocked Read More...
Sporting a head full of dreadlocks and a brooding wildman disposition that makes him seem a more stoic version of Blanka, Nicalli uses his own crazed form of martial arts, which includes a ground explosion that the player can aim.
What we're trying to say is, we're not sure if we hate the fact that there's a dude with electric dreadlocks in LawBreakers, or if we love it more than we've ever loved anything.
On one hand, the dreadlocked figure — sometimes in a business suit, sometimes naked — is blinded or constrained by the ties, perhaps an allusion to male responsibility, or, as Whyte has suggested, a more sophisticated form of Western bondage.
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