i remember now seeing this one movie with mid-east people drama in it — don't remember to
much about the movie except this one scene of men in mid-east dress advancing in protest in mass upon these soldier guards over something these people in mass thought was rightfully theirs (a freedom from violence was one of these things they thought was rightfully theirs).
I honestly don't remember too
much about the movie, except for vague pictures in my head of Queens and chess, the return of Tweedledee and Tweedledum, and of a villain called the Jabberwocky that freaked me out something fierce...
I can't seem to remember
much about this movie right now, and reading the synopsis just confused me more.
The score had me laughing from how cheesy it was, but there's really not
much about this movie to like.
To talk too
much about the movie's third act would do it a dire disservice, so I will focus instead on how honest it is, how truthful.
I went to an early showing and must say, not only did I not know
much about this movie but also wasn't expecting too much from it.
You will have noticed I have not said
much about the movie's women.
The story is pretty formulaic, and you probably won't remember
much about the movie when it's over, but it's an enjoyable slice of mindless entertainment that's anchored by a pair of likeable performances by Ari Graynor and co-writer Lauren Anne Miller.
Starring: Emily Browning, Olly Alexander, Hannah Murray Directed by: Stuart Murdoch Written By: Stuart Murdoch Rating: Unrated (US) Running Time: 1 hr 51 min Two Cents: I didn't know
much about this movie before purchasing m...
I didn't like Pacific Rim much, but that could have been my fault for thinking too
much about a movie that's about giant monsters vs. giant robots.
Blade Runner 2049 Is a Worthy Heir to a Classic — Christopher Orr can't disclose very
much about the movie, but he can say it's terrific.
Sadly, I really didn't know too
much about this movie until the news coverage of the tragic passing of actor Paul Walker highlighted it as one of his final roles.
There's so
much about this movie that doesn't work, it would almost be easier to list the good points, except there are none.
Midnight Special has something in common with 10 Cloverfield Lane — you don't want to know too
much about this movie going in.
«Ryan's trip informed as
much about the movie as any of our comics,» says Marvel Studios boss Kevin Feige.
I know way too
much about movies, but i'm also an avid gamer.
I can't say
much about the movie itself, because I haven't watched it.
Not exact matches
Of course, complaints
about the proliferation of sequels tend to be
much louder in the wake of a high - profile flop than they are after the release of financially and critically successful follow - ups (see: Disney's Marvel and Star Wars franchises, or the Despicable Me and Hunger Games
movies, to name a few — though, some
movies still make a ton of money despite toxic reviews).
Everyone talked
about how Amy Adams and Jennifer Lawrence weren't paid as
much as their male co-stars [in the
movie American Hustle] and also how Angelina Jolie was called a «minimally talented spoiled brat» by producer Scott Rudin.
But so far we haven't been able to learn
much about her in the two
movies other than she doesn't like First Order deserter, Finn (John Boyega).
The
movie was hot and people were talking
about it, but he also thought he could do something
much better given his background, so he created some stop - motion videos, such as an animated fight between Optimus Prime and Bumblebee.
Not
much is known
about the new
movie though we can confirm it will once again star Mark Wahlberg, who made his debut in the Transformers world in the previous
movie, Transformers: Age of Extinction.
Much like the success of last year's Warner Bros. film Wonder Woman helped change the conversation around a female superhero
movie helmed by a woman director, a box - office smashing debut for Black Panther could pave the way for a similar paradigm shift in Hollywood with regard to how studios approach big - budget stories
about characters of color.
It's hard to articulate what it is
about the first half of the
movie that feels so strange, but
much of it comes down to pacing.
No matter how
much Netflix spent to buy, say, a
movie about a road trip to pick up a lounge chair (yeah, we didn't see The Puffy Chair either), others could turn around and distribute it just as easily.
Indeed, it seems he doesn't care
about acting so
much as he cares
about being an actor in TV shows and
movies.
According to a 2015 Entertainment Weekly article, trailers give away so
much because audiences want to see and know more
about a
movie before release.
But the questions
about how
much of Trevorrow's plot will stay in the
movie will only increase after a new revelation from «Saturday Night Live» alum Bobby Moynihan.
When you're watching «The Incredibles,» it always feels like there's so
much more to discover
about the story and the history of the characters, which isn't always the case in Pixar
movies.
In the Vogue article, we learn
about Mayer's infant and her husband and what brand of cardigan she prefers,
much in the same way we would learn
about a
movie star's life and wardrobe.
«Laurene asked me how
much time I needed to make a
movie, and I told her
about a year and a half,» Mr. Guggenheim said.
Since he is
about my age, I grew up seeing that
much of the stuff he incoporated into his novels was plagiarized right out of old B horror
movies of the 1950's and early sixties!
I don't always talk to my pastor
about movies I plan on watching, mostly because being a film critic prevents me from having
much choice in the first place to a degree.
Much of the
movie plays out like a thrilling — and tragic — underdog sports story, but its surprise third act shows that the real story of Bill McCartney isn't just
about faith and success: It's
about personal redemption.
But still: It's hard to diss a
movie that displays so
much of what's undeniably good
about Amy Adams and Jennifer Lawrence — two attractive and fascinating characters.
I pretty
much had to be dragged to a
movie advertised as
about the making of Mary Poppins — a film I was never young enough to enjoy.
Tell them
about the love that doesn't show up in
movies:: I didn't do
much writing in my never - ending series of «What Love Looks Like» but I did love this one.
While there may be
much to critique
about Tinsel Town, it is more fair (and more Christian) to put the
movie in context and to acknowledge its positive characteristics — before we launch a broadside attack.
One thing I noticed as Dan and I talked
about the
movie afterward was how
much our personal backgrounds affected how we saw the characters.
So as you go
about tying fluffy red bows on neatly wrapped packages and compulsively checking to make sure you recorded every holiday
movie known to man, relish and rest in the fact that the most beautiful story ever told is so
much more beautiful than we ever thought possible.
But I don't think it's a
movie about God as
much as it's a
movie about this guy rejecting God.
Even people with less than a high school education today recognize the priority of the brain over the blood, so
much so in fact, that in the
movie, Hannibal (
about a cannibalistic serial killer), the thought of slicing out tiny parts of a person's brain, cooking them in a pan, and serving the pieces to that person to eat has become in the public's mind a more disturbing image than, say, serving a person a glass of their own blood to drink, which appears relatively tame in comparison.
I did not mind too
much about the way the
movie strayed from the biblical text.
I like clean humor as
much as I like dark humor, but everything I've read
about this
movie tells me that I will find no humor here.
I'm not sure if the
movie brings out
much of what you are talking
about, but it is neat to see how Mandella tried to unify the country.
Interstellar got announced last November, exactly one year before its release, and it being a Christopher Nolan
movie I got immediately interested — there wasn't
much to read
about the
movie and the teaser did not reveal
much, either, so my curiosity went through the roof.
I'm talking
about the kind of «feel bad» that comes from watching one of those men - are - evil
movies on Lifetime TV, starring some actress whom you either thought was dead or a
much bigger star, and it feels so good to feel so bad
about the men in your life even though 10 minutes ago you loved your husband just fine?
Whether we're praying together, watching a silly
movie, or even just in the car talking
about froyo... I'm giving SO
much thanks and praise that we have found each other in this world:)
Billy Crystal loved the Yankees of the 1960s so
much, he made a
movie about them called 61 *.
I don't talk
about it too
much because I don't want the
movie to overshadow my work as a hardworking football player.