Sentences with phrase «of fistfights»

The performance is part of Shana Lutker's ongoing series investigating the history of the fistfights of the Surrealists.
While not as good or as popular as Smokey, there is the same affable charm, full of likeable Good Ole Boys and plenty of fistfights occurring in between scenes of vehicular carnage.
This lends itself to the action sequences, as the environments add varied aesthetics and different personalities to the onslaught of fistfights, gun battles and car chases.
Physical confrontations pervade from start to finish with depictions of fistfights, blazing guns with endless ammunition, car chases, manhunts and explosions.
Certainly you couldn't have predicted this trait as easily as the standard - issue plot (the usual stuff about smugglers, superspies, and madmen bent on revenge), let alone the checklist of fistfights, spear fights, gunfights, chase scenes, and scenery - wrecking battles.
Bloodshed is fairly minimal, but there are some brutal moments, in particular a couple of fistfighting scenes and one unexpectedly intense beating scene.

Not exact matches

Hailey was initially jailed in 2012 after a group of women accused her of stabbing a baby during a fistfight.
There are still fistfights that are destined to begin because of 1993, but when the participants are handcuffed and sitting on the curb, one of them will turn to the other and say, «Roy Halladay sure was awesome, wasn't he?»
There are fistfights, hugs, drinking games, trades and millions of spent dollars.
That, of course, is what the 35 - year - old Smith is known for, a career spent in perpetual combat: three documented fistfights with teammates, scores of altercations with opponents, countless spins of the football in defiant celebration after every catch, even in practice.
You pass the era of the talkies and into a fistfight with Clark Gable.
Washington Post, «The silencing of Elizabeth Warren and an old Senate rule prompted by a fistfight,» Feb. 8, 2017
Signing, shaking hands, shooting the shit, engaging in political discourse with the American People, OK maybe having one or two heated arguments with an occasional fucking dicktard who apparently needs to turn an animated conversation into a fistfight because that's just the kind of self - medicating ballsack he is, I can't say any more right now according to my lawyer.
After one of the most shocking displays of Machiavellian politics in a statehouse awash with plots and conspiracy — when Democrats Hiram Monserrate and Pedro Espada helped Republicans take back control of the New York State Senate — it would not have been surprising if fistfights had broken out at the Italian Community Center near Albany, where Republican and Democratic lawmakers gathered last night for a fund - raiser.
Some of his and his friends» exploits include random (and sometimes unprotected) sex, drug use, fistfights, skipping school and home responsibilities, driving under the influence, and jumping off a second - story roof into a neighboring home's swimming pool.
The cost of conflict is much lower, in the sense that you may have a fistfight, but you probably won't die — at least not as easily as you'd die today.
In this episode, Scientific American editor - in - chief John Rennie talks about the magazine's history of involvement with efforts to debunk medical quakery and paranormal fakery, which included a fistfight between a Sci Am editor and Harry Houdini.
The occasional fistfight breaks out late at night, and the fast rate of play can be intimidating for a new player (a «fish» or «dead money»).
Steve: You know, today is also the anniversary of the death of Darwin, speaking of the human evolution with Kate, and just to finish up — am I wrong, but isn't the place you're most likely to find a fistfight at a conference, one of these human evolution anthropology conferences where people are arguing over whether that bone represents a new species or just an example of a known species or whether some artifact is again a new species or some kind of pathological example of an old species?
From start to finish, the chapters roll by offering fans of the genre chases, explosions, gun battles, fistfights and well - done cliffhangers.
Brings more grit, fistfights and violence to the singing cowboy's B western, surprising some of Roy's followers.
Violence: The film includes numerous scenes of brutal fistfights involving choking, head butting and some weapon use.
► Several teenagers confront three other teens in a train car and fistfights erupt with punching, kicking, choking and slamming of bodies onto walls and floors: a teen girl punches a young man for leering at her (we see a few scrapes on teen girls and teen boys), a teen boy pulls a knife and another boy takes it from him and stabs him multiple times below the frame while a young man holds a teen girl's head out the boxcar door, choking her (she gags) and trying to toss her out, but another young man pulls him away; during one fistfight the arm of a young man catches against a pole outside the boxcar as the train passes and the young man screams (it is implied that he lost his arm, but we do not see this).
A dead teen girl lies covered on a gurney is accompanied by three teen boys and as one of the boys uncovers her face another boy rushes him and a fistfight ensues.
Soldiers with drawn rifles chase residents of a commune into a gathering place to scan them; two teen boys and a teen girl subdue three soldiers and take their rifles from them, escaping, and we see scuffling and fistfights, but no injuries.
As directed by my generational contemporary Len Wiseman, Live Free or Die Hard shows at least a superficial understanding of what makes Willis» most fiscally successful films tick: a hissable bad guy (Timothy Olyphant as cyber-terrorist Thomas Gabriel), armies of henchmen (and in this case, a henchwoman), and NYPD cop McClane, reluctantly drawn into bruising fistfights and games of chicken with large vehicles and machinery.
Parents» Guide: This depiction of dealing with loss includes some profanities and crude sexual comments, teen bullying, a few fistfights and verbal confrontations, as well as a boozy mall Santa.
Even on a bad day, a decent number of these powerhouse villains could probably hold their own against the Hulk in a fistfight.
Though rife with obvious CGI elements (there's a shot involving a parachute that will go down as one of the worst CG shots of 2014), it's a fairly impressive effort, with the requisite explosions, destruction, knife throws, and fistfights galore.
Liman and his successor, Paul Greengrass, reasoned that deliberately chaotic shooting and editing could transform an otherwise ordinary fistfight or rooftop sprint into something disorienting and, when done well, pretty exciting, and the Bourne films handle that sort of cut - and - paste mania better than just about any film not directed by Tony Scott.
Aside from a quick look at a passing steam train, there are brief scenes where Morgan threatens a local man as he pins him to the wall, then a violent shot of the outlaw involved in a brutal fistfight.
Weapons, savage fistfights, extensive property damage and a military tank driven over droves of innocent commuters rev up the violence levels as well.
Violence: Following in the pattern of the franchise's previous films, this production is replete with fistfights, sword assaults, shootings, stabbings and other means of inflicting death.
I singled out one of the film's most visually dazzling sequences — a prolonged fistfight between Ryan Gosling and Harrison Ford in a cavernous nightclub populated by glitchy holograms — and I asked him what challenges he faced while lensing that scene.
In this segment, the digital world has collapsed in the presence of man — computer wars have become fistfights.
Along with numerous fistfights and frequent knife use, there are also several instances of animals being killed either for sport or safety reasons.
When big, bad aliens immerge from a crack under the Pacific Ocean, Human forces create robots equally large and engage in a fistfight with hopes of saving the world.
Other than a fistfight involving the two leaders (including repeated punches to the face and some blood), most of the action violence happens between the airborne flamethrowers and the humans (who are occasionally eaten whole).
«Most of the running time is occupied by action sequences, chase sequences, motorcycle sequences, plow - truck sequences, helicopter sequences, fighter - plane sequences, towering android sequences and fistfights.
Producer / co-writer Jay Baruchel takes over the directorial reins from Michael Dowse, most of the raucous ensemble is back, and of course Goon: Last of the Enforcers is knee - deep in hockey, foul language, and very nasty fistfights.
All of this unfolds at a breakneck pace, with a flurry of hyper - violent shootouts, chases and fistfights.
First, with a fistfight between brothers in a bar called «Irish Eyes» (with Irish fiddling on the jukebox) and then with an incident that wouldn't look out of place in an opera.
Violence: The film includes frequent portrayals of weapon and gun use, explosions, fistfights, shootings, stabbings, impaling and other bloody injuries.
And there are depictions of verbal arguments, physical power struggles and outright fistfights that occur over inappropriate behavior, infidelity and a character's derogatory racial remarks.
All the bullets and fistfights eventually lead to a high - stakes poker game in which the super sleuth, with the backing of the UK government and the watchful eye of their beautiful treasury officer Vesper (Eva Green), puts taxpayers» money on the line in the hopes of breaking up Le Chiffre's evil network.
The harsh realities of inner city life are portrayed, with teens engaging in fistfights and crime (like car theft and acts of vandalism), as well as gang violence that leads to a drive by shooting (some blood is shown).
However in this era of aging action heroes (Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, The Expendables 2, Red), quick film edits are needed to create the illusion of rough and tumble fistfights.
The climactic sequence is a no - holds - barred assortment of «vehicular warfare» (between cars, a drone, and a helicopter), fistfights, and a flipping and free - running foot - chase (featuring Tony Jaa and providing the most noticeable example of Walker's absence).
For example: there's a fantastic scene where an argument between Jeff Bridges and Timothy Bottoms escalates into a fistfight — the shots start to come faster and faster, almost every new shot from a different camera angle, culminating in a shocking moment of violence.
Sporadic profanities, the bloody murder of DJ's brother and some fistfights may be a concern for families along the crotch - grabbing choreography employed by some of the performers and off - stage condom discussions.
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