Sentences with phrase «movie about a group of people»

Robert Altman I think is the other American filmmaker who has made several movies about groups of people, you know?
Fascinating sci - fi movie about a group of people who encounter an alien spaceship and try to uncover the truth behind those weird events.

Not exact matches

Luckily, other than a group of genetically altered singing frogs, this movie is all about people and the kind of relationships that hold them together.
It's one of the less essential Coen brothers movies, but there's still fun to be gained from this cynical farce about a small group of very stupid people caught up in a blackmail and espionage yarn involving a retired CIA operative (John Malkovich), his mislaid memoirs, his wife (Tilda Swinton), her lover (George Clooney) and two dumb but ambitious gym employees (Frances McDormand, Brad Pitt).
The movie, rather, is about how a group of people staying at a beautiful hotel in a beautiful part of the world find their ways of reclaiming their youthful spirits and feel, well, young.
I think for Chris Nolan, the interesting thing about Chris was that even though «The Dark Knight» was as large a movie as it was, I always felt like I was doing a chamber piece in the sense that the scenes were always involving a small group of people.
And while that film is certainly impressive in its own right, it was refreshing to see the Academy give its top honors to Tom McCarthy's Spotlight, a more modest, but passionate movie about a group of hard - working, passionate people.
The movie shows why it makes no sense of have a sane story about a group of insane people, so why not circle back, go through multiple drafts, throw in short stories, and pepper the flick with razor - sharp wit with emotional depth?
An ensemble comedy about a group of wronged employees who attempt to rob the boss who took the money from their pension plans under the false pretense of investing, the movie does several things right — a talented cast, a deplorably matter - of - fact sociopath as a villain, and, above all, a dizzying setpiece of a robbery that features a 2,000 - pound car and three people dangling hundreds of feet in the air among them.
She says that the thing she loved most about writing Eye Contact was creating a central character who was as much of a mystery as the perpetrator of the crime; she also comments that 20 % of Americans currently identify themselves as disabled, «an enormous group of people that has been underrepresented in books, movies and TV»; so her next book will be a mystery centered around a woman with cerebral palsy who is the unlikely center of a love triangle and the victim of a crime committed in its wake.
With ESPN, Pixar, Star Wars, Marvel movies, and, oh yeah, Disney cartoons, this thing is going to find a large group of people willing to pay money every month — and that's before we even talk about Disney potentially buying Fox.
There's something magical about watching a movie outdoors — the fresh air, the novelty of a big screen under the stars, the excitement of a group of people all laughing along to their favorite lines.
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