Sentences with phrase «opening scene featuring»

After a mostly tangential opening scene featuring Josh Hartnett (Wicker Park), we are introduced to Detective John Hartigan (Bruce Willis, Hostage), a soon - to - be-retired cop out to crack the last case of his career, nailing the child - raping son of a senator, Junior (Stahl, Terminator 3).
Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice director Zack Snyder explains the symbolism of the opening scene featuring a young Bruce Wayne.
The opening scene featuring a land train is fantastic, mainly because it seems to involve the most actual driving.
It was a 40 - minute epilogue to the opening scene, and that opening scene featured possibly the biggest plot contrivance in SOA's four - season history, one that somehow out shined the still - never - explained short con that killed Stahl and Jimmy O at the end of Season 3.
Or maybe Isabelle's the problem; this is one of those movies where people talk about sex more than they have it, even if the opening scene features the heroine in the raw and in bed with a selfish married lover named Vincent (Xavier Beauvois).
Audiences have been known to visibly gasp in one of the opening scenes featuring Lady Bird's mother driving and bickering with her daughter, who abruptly opens the car door in the middle of a highway and throws herself out.
Right off the bat, I thought The Shape of Water was heading in that same disappointing direction because the opening scene features our heroine, Elisa (Sally Hawkins), masturbating in a bathtub.
It doesn't factor into American Sniper as much, though the opening scenes featuring Chris with his father together hunting deer in a forest tinged golden from the low angles of the sun's rays suggest he is still concerned about constructing a layered character study.
The opening scene features Jack building a guitar out of a coke bottle and a bit of driftwood, and it gets even better... insightful and delightful!

Not exact matches

The opening scene in The Defenders features a martial arts master with a glowing fist and his katana - wielding partner defending a mysterious man from a super powered ninja in a fogged out Cambodian sewer tunnel, and things get substantially wilder from there.
A new TV show will debut on Jan. 10 featuring three topless women in its opening scene, and no, it's not a scandalous drama on HBO or Cinemax.
From the opening scene, featuring Thor dangling upside - down in a net and talking to himself, it's clear the tone of this adventure will be drastically different.
David Strathairn is also featured in these scenes from director Steven Spielberg's Presidential biopic, opening in limited release today.
Deponia Doomsday contains one of the greatest opening scenes we've ever seen in a Point»n Click / Adventure game, featuring none other than David Hayter.
While Bucky wasn't featured in the primary story of Black Panther, he did surface in a post-credit scene, which opened with a group of Wakandan children huddling around someone in a tent.
They include an alternate opening of Carol doing an voice exercise with an annoyingly - voiced woman interviewing her in a bookstore, more of and on Dani and Moe's rocky marriage, a scene featuring an accomplished female voiceover artist (played by Melissa Disney), and a number of additional clips from the convincing fake reality dating TV show woven throughout the film,
A cocktail party features glasses of wine held by men and women and a few of each drink from their glasses, a man at a party sips from a glass of whiskey and another man chugs from a bottle of clear liquor (the label is hidden), a man drinks expensive whiskey in his office and his living room, a man holds an open can of beer on a sidewalk, four men in the back of a pickup truck drink from beer cans as the vehicle is moving, a man drinks from a small bottle of whiskey in his living room (the scene cuts to him lying asleep on the floor with the empty bottle, two crushed beer cans, and a cigarette butt around him), a man at a party says that he is wasted (implying intoxication, no drugs are seen or mentioned), a man offers a worker a 6 - pack of beer to bring a shovel and help clean a bathroom (please see the Violence / Gore category for more details), a man offers another man a drink and he declines saying that he is high on life, and a man holds a can that could be beer.
Features both the American and British versions of the film, commentary track by creator / actor Richard O'Brien and co-star Patricia Quinn, an audience participation picture - in - picture track with a live version of the show and a «callback» subtitle track that cues viewers to classic audience responses, featurettes, two deleted musical scenes, outtakes, alternate opening and ending, and other celebrations of the culture of «Rocky Horror.»
In the opening scene of Lynne Ramsay's sophomore feature, the almost soundless world is bathed in the colourful glow of a Christmas tree.
The special features include several deleted scenes including an alternate opening and ending, a making of Scream 4 segment, gag reel and commentary by Director Wes Craven, Emma Roberts, Hayden Panettiere and Neve Campbell.
It opens with a prologue, featuring a trio of miniature garden gnomes called the Goons (all voiced by Kelly Asbury), who spend the entirety of the scene arguing over which story about the lawn ornaments they should tell.
The Death Spa archives were opened up for this feature, including pages from an original James Bartruff screenplay that got a complete rewrite by Paradise, behind - the - scenes photography, and video footage from the set.
At the same time, Rivers» second solo feature is the closest to «conventional» that his work as ever come — the term being used very loosely here, given that The Sky Trembles opens as a somewhat absurd behind - the - scenes documentary before following Spanish filmmaker Oliver Laxe off into the unknown.
Zootopia is a thrilling and eye - opening cinematic experience featuring great comedy (a scene at the DMV is one of the funniest scenes I've seen onscreen this year) and a tremendous script.
John Michael McDonagh's much - anticipated follow - up to first feature The Guard, Calvary certainly aims to shake audience expectations, evidenced scarcely five seconds into the opening scene when our faceless parishioner delivers his ultimatum.
Extras: New audio commentary featuring jazz and film critic Gary Giddins, music and cultural critic Gene Seymour, and musician and bandleader Vince Giordano; new introduction by Giddins; new interview with musician and pianist Michael Feinstein; four new video essays by authors and archivists James Layton and David Pierce on the development and making of «King of Jazz»; deleted scenes and alternate opening - title sequence; «All Americans,» a 1929 short film featuring a version of the «Melting Pot» number that was restaged for the finale of «King of Jazz»; «I Know Everybody and Everybody's Racket,» a 1933 short film featuring Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra; two Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoons from 1930, featuring music and animation from «King of Jazz.»
There's also an alternate opening scene, a costume - test montage, and one very short special feature on the use of animals in the film that's only notable for Kenneth Branagh's apparent diplomacy regarding furry creatures.
Scream Factory has packed a wealth of new bonus features into this release, including an informative featurette on the visual effects, a conversation with soundtrack co-composer Alan Howarth, an interview with set photographer Kim Gottlieb - Walker, a highly entertaining look back with actor Joe Unger of the original deleted opening scene (also included), and a chat with filmmaker David Decateau about his experiences working on Escape.
Under special features, find ten imminently disposable deleted scenes, including an alternate opening that introduces an elided subplot revolving around a group of art dealers who scope out David Wark on Madeleine's behalf.
Opening with a surfing scene that recalls those Frankie and Annette beach blanket operas and featuring a para-surfing scene mid-film with the worst rear - projection since the same, Die Another Day locates our favourite British Cold War relic in North Korea, engaged in a hovercraft battle that is as uninspired as it sounds.
Running time: 111 minutes Distributor: Anchor Bay Entertainment DVD Extras: Feature commentary with director Wes Craven and the cast, deleted and extended scenes, alternate opening, extended ending, gag reel and «the Making of Scream 4» featurette.
Earlier this week we brought you a look at the opening scene from Batman Ninja [watch it here], and now a new clip has arrived online from the upcoming DC anime feature which sees the Dark Knight taking on a group of Samurai in Joker masks; check it out below... SEE ALSO: Watch the Batman Ninja trailer -LSB-...]
The third Yo - kai Watch movie, called Yo - kai Watch: Sora Tobu Kujira to Sekai no Dai Bouken da Nyan (featuring animated and live - action scenes), will open on December 17th in Japan.
The opening cut - scene featuring the hero's father Ortega is gone, and so is the dice game.
The film features a stunning opening scene that contains all the cinematic beauty of the title sequence from Watchmen, but without the intellectual spin the alternate history vibe afforded that superhero opus.
Repeated viewings of the comedy — which opens with a scene in which a deer urinates in Sandler's face, and goes downhill from there — has forced the two to get creative in their weekly ruminations, with segments like «Paddy Schwartz Party Time» (parsing out moments from the brief appearances by featured player Patrick Schwarzenegger) and «Steve Buscemi Mystery Tour» (in which they attempt to investigate the never - explained injuries sustained by Buscemi's character).
A slapstick comedy featuring a host of great clowns, CADDYSHACK boosted the career of «Saturday Night Live» alum Bill Murray and revived the sagging fortunes of the wonderful Rodney Dangerfield, whose opening scenes are some of the funniest on film.
The film does get across the futility of war, and the opening scene, featuring a young Russian soldier asking a psychic how soon before he will die, is a moment that cleverly balances the science fiction with real life tragedy.
Bonus features include a commentary track with director Julie Anne Robinson and co-producer Jennifer Gibgot, a behind - the - scenes set tour with young co-star Bobby Coleman, an alternate opening sequence, deleted scenes and not only the music video for «When I Look At You» by Miley Cyrus, but a making - of featurette for the video.
The movie features some dark scenes, especially the opening, but the action is always visible.
For a film that, as its plot demands, often features bodies in extreme physical proximity — embracing, fucking, fighting — The Lovers also pays close attention to the spatial (and emotional) chasms separating its constellation of couples, evidenced in the softly shattering opening scene.
Mortensen's open features lend a note of ambiguity to every scene, notably the haunting final shot, and he makes the often huge shifts in Tom's character believable.
We open on a scene featuring Rav Krushka (Anton Lesser), a beloved Orthodox Jewish rabbi in London giving a sermon on free will, which separates humankind from all of God's other creations.
Special features on the unrated widescreen DVD release include alternate opening, deleted scenes, behind - the - scenes footage, and trailer.
This time round his alter - ego Wade Wilson finds himself on the cusp of parenthood, only to have the chance tragically wrenched away during the film's unexpected opening scenes (a surprise neatly reflected in the James Bond - style titles sequence featuring credits such as: «Written By: the real villains of this film» and «Starring: someone who clearly doesn't like sharing the limelight»).
(To emphasize this, I, Tonya features a composite character named Martin Maddox, played with greasy charm by Bobby Cannavale, who describes himself in one of the movie's opening scenes as «a reporter for Hard Copy, a pretty crappy show that «legitimate» news outlets looked down on — and then became.»)
A number of bonus features from Spider - Man 2's original DVD are not included here: another Spidey Sense graphic subtitle trivia track, Train's «Ordinary» music video, four making - of webisodes, the 15 - minute «Interwoven: The Women of Spider - Man», «Enter the Web» (multi-angle B - roll from the filming of four sequences), a gallery of Alex Ross» paintings of scenes from the original film used in the opening credits, a trailer for and making - of featurette on Activision's Spider - Man 2 video game, and, least importantly, DVD - ROM content supposedly consisting of weblinks and an S - M 3 countdown which I couldn't even get to work (trying to use InterActual these days is a disaster).
Features deleted and extended scenes, an alternative opening sequence with an alternate narrator, outtakes, ten minutes of cast interviews and a behind - the - scenes tour.
Whiplash, the overwhelmingly riveting second feature from young (born 1985) writer / director Damien Chazelle (Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench) opens with a scene of an aspiring jazz drummer, Andrew — played with searing commitment by rising star Miles Teller (The Spectacular Now)-- rehearsing in an empty studio space.
An opening dance sequence set in a Cleaver American Fifties features more stunt people, professional dancers, and trampolines than Cirque du Soleil, its artificiality setting the tone for the rest of the film, while the scene's conclusion (with the picture's hero trapping the celebrants in a giant dance hall, dooming them to death should a fire break out) serves as a pretty succinct summary of the film's feckless themes and carelessness.
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