Sentences with phrase «movie feels rushed»

From here on out, the movie feels rushed.

Not exact matches

I feel they have missed a chance for another special movie here, this whole product feels rushed and not entirely thought out.
The film feels predictable, rushed and overdone, like the filmmakers tried way too hard at masking a revenge themed action movie, and in turn the results are unimpressive.
80:00: This movie rushes the Wayne / Vale relationship, which feels all the more awkward considering where Batman Returns (1992) goes with it: nowhere.
It's a smart movie — a quintessentially L.A. one, too, in its self - awareness (the nameless hero is a stuntman, Richard Rush fans take note), and it has an extraordinary quality of stillness that paints in confident strokes what it feels like to be completely alone by luck you call choice.
This ain't Resurrecting the Champ meets August Rush, the feel - good movie of the spring?
The movie ultimately feels rushed into the Civil War storyline.
There are some issues I had with the film such as some of the cinematography not looking as good as it could've been due to the poor lighting, some of the quick cuts in the action scenes were distracting, the movie can drag a little at points and I do think cutting off 15 minutes could've made the pacing move a little more faster (some scenes felt a little rushed too), where the film decides to take its story can be predictable, and some of the green screen was REALLY noticeable.
I like the world created, but once the story is underway, the movie has a rushed / compressed feeling like it's trying to fit too much in.
Whether Eastwood is an artistic genius or a rushed director who didn't anticipate that his movie would feel like a pilot for a reality TV series, is beside the point.
A further irony for me was that, in a movie of epic 157 - minute length, in which so many songs and reprises were rendered faithfully on screen, «Drink with Me,» felt shortened and rushed.
So I had mixed feelings going into this movie... The version with Liam Neeson and Geoffrey Rush is one of my all - time fave movies..
Personally coming off the geeky adrenaline rush that is the Avengers, I felt pretty disappointed with the Phase II movies thus far.
A few pivotal scenes are a little forced and rushed, and the score, by Oscar - winning composer Michael Giacchino, is a bit of a retro homage to the older «Apes» movies, but feels out of place here.
There are some wonderful stylistic tricks Vaughn employs at different points (first - person POV, split - screen montages); however, now and again the film feels a little unbalanced or unpolished in its editing (likely due to the rushed production schedule), though average movie fans are not likely to notice these seams sticking out.
The movie was rushed into production, shot, and edited faster than most movies, which parallels the pressure the journalists felt to get their story published.
The entire film feels rushed, like it's trying to compact two or three movies into an hour and 50 minutes.
«Rush» turns the feel - good sports movie subgenre on its head.
Cinematographer Bradford Young lends the movie a dark and distinctive look, although his compositions feel hemmed in by the series» overall stylistic parameters, and Pietro Scalia's editing gives the action sequences a pleasing snap that makes you wish the combination of Howard's Rush and Apollo 13 played as well on screen as it does on paper.»
On the one hand, even if an extra forty minutes had been thrown in, this movie probably would have felt nothing short of rushed had it not been split up.
For a movie with as long a production history as Ender's Game, the finished product feels rushed.
The movie doesn't feel as bloated as other entries in the genre, yet it also doesn't feel like the rushed, slap - dash affair one would suspect from hearing of the production woes.
Where many recent superhero movies have risked overstaying their welcome, «Fantastic Four,» at 100 minutes, actually feels a tad rushed at the end, with a hasty climax that nevertheless produces some solid moments — at least a few of which, given the slow pace initially, probably should have come at least a half - hour sooner.
As for Peter Rabbit, the movie feels like an unthinking, rushed attempt to meld the comic and thematic DNA of Wes Anderson «s sublime Fantastic Mr. Fox and Peter Lord & Nick Park «s excellent Chicken Run, despite a strong performance from Domnhall Gleeson as the grumpy farmer.
From the beginning of the movie where the Iranians rush the embassy, to the final moments of the film, there is an ominous and urgent feeling that something any second could go wrong and ruin everything.
As soon as you start the game, you will feel the rush of nostalgia as the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie theme accompanies the start - up screen, with the fan service continuing during the game's 4 - 5 hour campaign.
This gameplay is like watching a scary movie; a rush of adrenaline hits as you get the feeling a zombie might jump out, but you don't know when or where.
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