Sentences with phrase «opening scene involving»

I'll never forget the first time that I watched The Walking Dead; while I was unfazed by a graphic opening scene involving a zombie child, the scene where the walkers took down a horse caused me to cover my face with a pillow.
She of course accepts in a horribly embarrassing opening scene involving Jim's dad, again played by Eugene Levy, who reacts to his son's troubles with a perfect mix of shock and admiration.
For instance, the opening scene involves a flavorful argument about paying for a meal instead of just getting straight into the meat of the idea of cults.
The opening scene involves a man looking at grids and layouts of various buildings and parking lots.
The opening scene involves a character removing something from a dog's rectum.

Not exact matches

Lizzy Newsome was involved with the Austin tech scene before moving to Vegas to open a toy store, Kappa Toys, which is funded by the Downtown Project.
The opening scene of Jesus public ministry left no doubt: a commitment to Jesus involves a commitment to build communities of peace and justice.
The frontons in Hartford, Milford and Bridgeport did not open until 1976 and 1977, but from the beginning politicians have been involved behind the scenes.
The story started with a scene where you found yourself in bed at the hospital when you opened your eyesyou had been involved in a car accident.
The opening scene featuring a land train is fantastic, mainly because it seems to involve the most actual driving.
It has an involving and cathartic journey for its protagonist, just the right balance of humor, drama and action, and is littered from its in medias res opening to its post-credit scene with great cinematic moments.
One memorable scene involves a sweeping pan along the bar to the opening strains of Patsy Cline's «Sweet Dreams».
The only item that could be called Greek tragedy — which involves deaths of heroes — occurs in the opening scene showing that one pledge died a year earlier while the brothers forced humongous amounts of alcohol down his throat.
Nolan and cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema («Interstellar») shot the film using 65 mm and IMAX cameras, and while the big scenes of spectacle are unquestionably sweeping and impressive, it's the smaller moments that stayed with me more, whether it's those cascading leaflets in the opening scene, the terrifying majesty of a fighter plane gliding with its engines off, or a harrowing sequence involving a downed plane that will doubtless be used by English teachers to illustrate what poet Stevie Smith meant when she wrote «Not Waving but Drowning.»
He persuades Rosie to drive a getaway car each time he does the unthinkable: he invades the turf of several mafia clubs with an Uzi he knows not how to use (a funny scene finds him shooting wildly into the air to get the mobsters» attention), and Rosie is so involved with her cigarette that she is unable to open the car door for her thieving boyfriend.
From the opening scenes it already felt similar to Stand By Me, as we follow two kids learning about life and how to grow up through the adult situations that they encounter and haphazardly get involved in.
In the opening scene Davis (played by Gyllenhaal) is in the passenger seat next to his wife Julia when their car is involved in a serious crash.
Macer doesn't have the best of opening scenes either, which involves her discovering a whole army of corpses hidden in a suburban Arizona home by a drug baron, before a booby trap goes off, injuring her and maiming one of her team.
Some of the film's opening sequences, such as the way the T - 800 goes about getting clothes and wheels, feel like more elaborate but not necessarily more involving versions of scenes from the first film.
Not even wasting a second to get started, the film opens with a fantastic scene involving our hero at work as he drives two thugs to a warehouse somewhere in L.A.
It involves a bright young woman named Rhoda Williams (Brit Marling), who in the opening scene, has been accepted into the astrophysics program at MIT.
It includes some additional character development - notably Grace's (Sigourney Weaver) back - story and a brief opening sequence on Earth - but most of it involves expanded and enhanced scenes of life on Pandora.
The latter overwhelm the movie to such an extent that much of the material comes across as unintentionally comic (One scene that is played for laughs involves Cross and Kane arguing which of them will use the severed thumb of the first victim to open a safe, which is just strange after seeing how disgusted the characters are over the torture of the woman).
The eccentrics extolled in the opening scene include Michael Burry (Christian Bale), a Northern California — based MD and money manager who invents the credit default swap in the mid-Aughts, when the film's central action kicks off; Mark Baum (Steve Carell, also hideously coiffed), an obnoxious hedge fund manager whose backstory involving a dead - by - suicide brother somehow positions him as the film's most steadfast moral compass; and Ben Rickert (Brad Pitt), a onetime trader for Chase turned secular eschatologist who advises two young, aspiring operators, Jamie Shipley (Finn Wittrock) and Charlie Geller (John Magaro), how to bet against Wall Street.
In the riveting opening scene, Toyo watches his father help Toyo's beloved uncle Koji perform seppuku, a samurai ritual involving disembowelment and decapitation.
This is a quest that involves breaking an ice - related curse to open a door, a scene depicted in the Hogwarts Mystery trailer.
It doesn't look particularly next gen on the Xbox One, however, and there's a disappointing amount of loading that takes place, both behind the scenes (lengthy sections involving opening doors) and during action sequences (they'll literally stop while «loading» appears in the corner) throughout.
I think that all VR platforms can benefit from it because you get a large player - based to play against and it can open up a big scene for e-sports where all platforms are involved.
It was opened in 1991 by Australian - born Brian Wallace, who's been involved in the city's burgeoning art scene since his arrival as a student in the 1980s.
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