Sentences with phrase «ogre in»

Some animated cutscenes also depict violence: ogres smashing villagers with clubs; a bloodied man impaled by a large piece of wood; a character hitting an ogre in the head with a pickaxe.
Continuing on in our series partnered with Namco Bandai, the Level Up Your Game guys give an overview of Ancient Ogre in Tekken Tag Tournament 2.
Doing so was inspired by a Strike that dropped as part of House of Wolves, but in this Heroic Mission is spawned a huge Ogre, trapped you, and gave you a time limit to kill said extremely powerful Ogre in.
Soon, another ogre in pursuit of the first arrives at the deserted house.
Suffice it to say I got six free comic books from The Laughing Ogre in the Clintonville area of Columbus, and bought a compilation Sinfest book because, damn, I got six free comic books.
Using his own well - honed aptitude for scrutiny and mimicry, Mr. Myers became one of the most successful comedians of his era, first on «Saturday Night Live» and in the «Wayne's World» movies, then as a saucy secret agent in the «Austin Powers» series and the voice of a misunderstood ogre in the «Shrek» animated features.
More like the ogre in the Jack and the Beanstalk fairy tale.
The movie has been so long in the making at DreamWorks that the late Chris Farley was originally intended to voice the jolly green ogre in the title role.
Rather, Shrek lives happily ever after because it's such a feisty but good - natured embrace of the inner ogre in everyone, and such an irreverent smackdown of the Establishment in all its» heigh - ho» tyranny.
When «Third» opens, Princess Fiona (Cameron Diaz) is trying to tell Shrek (Mike Myers) that there is a little ogre in the oven.
«A child,» J. R. R. Tolkien wrote, «may well believe a report that there are ogres in the next country: many grown - up persons find it easy to believe of another country» («On Fairy Stories,» The Tolkien Reader [Ballantine, 1966]-RRB-.
«A child,» says J. R. R. Tolkien in his piece «On Fairy - Stories,» «may well believe... that there are ogres in the next country; many grown - up persons find it easy to believe of another country» (Tree and Leaf [Houghton Muffin, 1965], p. 39).
The Dutch trading post at Dejima becomes a Pirates Of The Caribbean - like hideaway, where slaves fight ogres in gladiatorial combat.
Having two ogres in the family is especially distressing to the King (John Cleese) because he cut a deal with Fairy Godmother (Jennifer Saunders) promising Fiona to Prince Charming (Rupert Everett).
But some things are different; now it appears that a Pursuer will be placed alongside the pair of Ogres in the game's starting area, where players can switch their gender.
But don't let the ogres in shining armor get you down.
Their health seems to have been buffed to ludicrous degrees too; fighting ogres in the previous game was a tough fight but now it requires complete cooperation with your team which can be difficult when playing with random players.
From a third - person perspective, players use swords to attack and kill ogres in melee - style combat; large blood - splatter effects occur when enemies are hit.
Meanwhile, it can save you the world from big ogres in Extinction or from a diseased meteor in Dark Rose Valkyrie.

Not exact matches

Other than an old collection of supersti.tions and stories about talking snakes, burning bushes that speak, and commands to kill each other in the name of your imaginary sky ogre, you have none.
It is important for us to emphasise in our teaching and our preaching that the death of Jesus was neither desired nor demanded by the Father, otherwise we make an ogre of our God.
At any moment in the story, a paladin might find himself confronted by a giant Saracen astride a galloping giraffe, or trapped in an enchanted castle oblivious of his own name, or beset by an army of demons, or challenged by an ogre, or lost in a fairy otherworld full of the most exquisite enchantments, or at the mercy of a sorcerer.
And if you don't believe in Jesus, and even if you have the slightest shadow of doubt, Jesus and his ogre daddy god will torture you for eternity.
If you've ever attempted your own gluten - free adventures in the kitchen, you know the oh - my - gawwwd - this - is - disgusting ogre of which I speak.
Now I read the many awful Monsanto - approved ingredients that are in soy formula and I feel like an ogre.
The pitcher in the second video is a bearded ogre, as imposing before he throws a pitch as when the pitch is on its way.
It humanizes breastfeeding in a nice way that doesn't make you feel like an ogre for not being super-committed or knowledgeable about it.
Of course, the human rights army has also weighed in with the ogre of looming dictatorship, claiming humiliating judges was tantamount to endangering democracy.
What's the point in being a muscle bound sluggish Ogre or lacking confidence?
Whenever Shrek (Mike Myers) is sent away on a quest — be it to rescue a princess, find a potion or, in the case of this movie, seek out a royal heir — it's never more than a case of brief, breezy there - and - back - again, with one or two minor diversions (usually some kind of ambush in a forest), plus perhaps a campfire - side heart - to - heart, during which the irascible ogre will at least partially come to terms with whichever self - doubt that's plaguing him — this time his confidence in himself as a father.
Cast: Mike Myers as Shrek (voice) Eddie Murphy as Donkey (voice) Cameron Diaz as Princess Fiona (voice) Antonio Banderas as Puss In Boots (voice) Julie Andrews as Queen Lillian (voice) John Cleese as King Harold (voice) Rupert Everett as Prince Charming (voice) Eric Idle as Merlin (voice) Justin Timberlake as Artie (voice) Susan Blakeslee as Evil Queen (voice) Cody Cameron as Pinocchio / Three Pigs / Ogre Baby / Bohort (voice) Larry King as Doris (voice) John Krasinski as Lancelot (voice) Ian McShane as Captain Hook (voice) Cheri Oteri as Sleeping Beauty / Actress (voice) Regis Philbin as Mabel (voice) Amy Poehler as Snow White (voice) Seth Rogen as Ship Captain (voice) Maya Rudolph as Rapunzel (voice) Amy Sedaris as Cinderella (voice) Aron Warner as Wolf (voice)
I wish I could say the third time's a charm, but charm is the one thing that's missing from Shrek the Third, Dreamworks» latest chapter in the storybook life of the world's kindest, gentlest ogre.
Notably lacking in the Geritol department are new directors Chris Miller and Raman Hui, plus a coterie of screenwriting elves, all of whom flounder sadly in the search for more material now that everybody's favourite ogre is living happily ever after in Far, Far Away.
In Shrek the Third, the grumpy green ogre suffers from a case of midlife crisis and fear of fatherhood.
As heirs - apparent, Shrek and Fiona are next in line to be the new sovereigns unless the unhappy ogre can find Fiona's cousin Artie (voice by Justin Timberlake) and convince him to take the throne.
The death of the king leaves Shrek as the reluctant heir to the throne, and the ogre sails off to find a replacement in the person of Artie, a prep - school bully magnet with the voice of Justin Timberlake.
Buff but boring: Shrek's jolly green ogre seems a little too polished in his third outing.
The factor of ogre - dom, combined with Shrek's overwhelming sense of insecurity, lead him to pursue alternative persons to fill in the role of king.
On his death bed, Harold names Shrek the new king and, after goading from the unenthusiastic ogre, mentions that a young boy named Arthur is next in line after that.
On heels of the hilarious 2nd installment, the green ogre was going to have to step it up in order to come close to the laughs expected.
The domestication of the Ogre continues unabated in this third - and possibly last - installment of the increasingly - sanitized animated franchise.
Shrek's searching for a new king to rule the kingdom of Far Far Away in this installment, but he's been so domesticated that he's not much of an ogre anymore.
But they were awakened in the night by the crying on one ogre baby (Shrek: «I got it»).
A man dressed in a bad ogre costume, to appear like Shrek, came on the stage.
Paramount's grumpy - green - ogre franchise is the epitome of the hand - hold movie: family flicks that serve up action, tomfoolery and life - lessons for the kids, nonstop pop - culture in - jokes for the adults, and fart jokes for the whole family.
Lampooning tired stereotypes, Hollywood movies and conventional fairytales, this odorous monster from the swamp fell in love with a cursed princess who chose to remain an ogre herself.
Starring: Mike Myers as Shrek (voice) Eddie Murphy as Donkey (voice) Cameron Diaz as Princess Fiona (voice) Antonio Banderas as Puss In Boots (voice) Julie Andrews as Queen Lillian (voice) John Cleese as King Harold (voice) Rupert Everett as Prince Charming (voice) Eric Idle as Merlin (voice) Justin Timberlake as Artie (voice) Susan Blakeslee as Evil Queen (voice) Cody Cameron as Pinocchio / Three Pigs / Ogre Baby / Bohort (voice) Larry King as Doris (voice) John Krasinski as Lancelot (voice) Ian McShane as Captain Hook (voice) Cheri Oteri as Sleeping Beauty / Actress (voice) Regis Philbin as Mabel (voice) Amy Poehler as Snow White (voice) Seth Rogen as Ship Captain (voice) Maya Rudolph as Rapunzel (voice) Amy Sedaris as Cinderella (voice) Aron Warner as Wolf (voice)
Shrek the Third is perhaps the most subdued of the trilogy, and the softest, probably in keeping with the sentimental vibe brought forth through the injection of family values to the series now that ogre babies are on the way.
The ogre Shrek (Mike Myers) lives alone, quite happily, in his own private swamp, until his solitude is shattered by a noisy, restless troupe of fairy - tale and nursery - rhyme characters who've been forced from their homes by the nasty Lord Farquaad (John Lithgow), who, with his Prince Valiant haircut and long, squared - off jaw, resembles nothing so much as a cartoon - world version of Laurence Olivier's Richard III.
He told Shrek about the need for a new king: «You and Fiona are next in line for the throne,» but Shrek replied that he didn't think it was «a good idea» for an ogre to be king.
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