Sentences with phrase «out of that scene next»

After co-writing The Yakuza with his brother Leonard in 1974, he went on to write Taxi Driver, perhaps the best film to come out of that scene next to The Godfather, and certainly Schrader's best work as a writer.

Not exact matches

The winners of the sprint for sites and tenants will be resolved within the next two or three years, playing out against a backdrop of broad change in the Canadian retail scene.
One of them is John Carey, who was a Missouri State University student when Mozilla plucked him out of the Midwest and set him up with a free apartment nearby, along with the assignment to make a video of the behind - the - scenes work to prepare the next major version of Firefox.
Douthat and Salam's youth» they're among the brightest lights in the next generation of conservative writers» gives them a new perspective on the contemporary political scene, allowing them to step out beyond traditional conservative fixations on tax cutting and limited government» where the supposed Reagan solution is always the correct solution» and to offer incisive criticisms of how the Grand Old Party's ideology frequently serves as a blinder to effective policies for the working class.
WWE News, Backstage Stories, Photos & Videos How Long Alicia Fox Will Be Out Of Action, Photo From Rehearsal For Women's Royal Rumble Match Nia Jax gets the grand tour of New York's dating scene on an all - new Total Divas, leading to the idea for Maryse's next big partOf Action, Photo From Rehearsal For Women's Royal Rumble Match Nia Jax gets the grand tour of New York's dating scene on an all - new Total Divas, leading to the idea for Maryse's next big partof New York's dating scene on an all - new Total Divas, leading to the idea for Maryse's next big party.
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In the next scene, older now, they have a young son, Rocco, they both adore and run a small but thriving tax return and travel agency out of a street - front office in the heart of a Turkish quarter.
If anything, you'll be clamoring to find out what happens next, especially once you realize the implications of the now - requisite post-credits scene.
A laugh - out - loud - bad stinker of a movie in which * you * know what Eastwood's next «discovery» will be in the murder case a long time before does, and every potentially powerful scene is undermined by coarse acting, bad script and cheesy music.
Characters pop in and out with assorted bits of long - winded exposition that are necessary for the heroine to make it to the next scene (read: «level»), but even that fails to coalesce into anything that might create a proper shudder.
Jennifer Lopez and John Corbett - Jennifer Lopez having good laughs with co-star John Corbett while throwing out the trash for a scene on the set of «The Boy Next Door» filming in Hollywood - Hollywood, California, United States - Tuesday 12th November 2013 (49 Pictures)
As Sadie chooses to crash with her «art parents» (Kathryn Hahn and Paul Giamatti) instead of her actual parents while figuring out her next life move and agrees, in a lovely scene, to donate her eggs to help the desperate couple, we watch her soul grow richer and older on screen in the midst of an unconventional, makeshift New York family.
Godard would just chop out parts of the scene to get to the next point of interest.
Jupiter Ascending features plenty of battle scenes and David admitted:» When I found out the fighting scenes I was doing were with Channing Tatum, I thought, «I need to make sure I'm looking good,» because I don't want to be looking skinny and tiny next to him.
Del Toro creates one gorgeous moment after the next, including a show - stopping scene that turns into something out of a classic musical.
The scene with The Butcher is particularly disturbing, and the lady sitting next to me walked right out of the theater!
Perhaps last year's pre-E3 leak of Transformers: Devastation worked out so well that somewhere behind - the - scenes there's a person assigned to affect a slow trickle of information for Platinum Games» next cel - shaded cartoon - based brawler, like these first screens obtained by the folks at pureXBOX.
A party girl with a real knack for picking out the next big band from underground obscurity, Vine is the series» level - headed muse who moves up the ladder of Richie Finestra's (Bobby Cannavale) American Century Records and further into the ever - changing music scene.
Sony has given us our first look at 007's next big screen outing by releasing an official image of Daniel Craig as Bond in SPECTRE, along with a behind - the - scenes featurette that includes Craig, Lea Seydoux, Dave Bautista and director Sam Mendes...
QUESTION: Josh Brolin was talking about the first scene you guys shot together when he kicks the crap out of you next to the car.
Here's the kicker — the sign that marks his arrival is a suicide and it's at this point that we jump into the next scene which has someone hitting the roof of a truck after falling out of building # 333.
Stepping into the role of the pursued Aaron Cross is Jeremy Renner, who'll be everywhere next summer, though this is the role meant to make him a household name; presumably he won't be sitting out the action scenes as he did in «Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol ``... Gilroy's a director with chops, and this franchise has thus far remained visceral and exciting, so count this as one of our most anticipated blockbusters.
It goes out of its way to avoid conflict or drama or crisis, and it fails to provide a single narrative reason to keep watching from one scene to the next.
We don't completely understand what he does next until a couple of scenes later, and things don't pan out exactly as we suspect.
Slipping into the world of his novel, he spent the next six weeks laughing and arguing with his characters, acting out scenes like a madman on the streets of London for hours on end.
While a scene in which Mark gets laxatives slipped into his drink draws out the sure guffaws for those who titter at bathroom humor, that scene is also the last laugh to be had for most of the viewing audience, who will likely grow impatient for the next 30 minutes wondering when the next big gag is going to come into play.
Following a behind the scenes featurette and a batch of concept art for Solo: A Star Wars Story, four new character posters have arrived online for the Star Wars anthology movie ahead of its release next week featuring Han Solo (Alden Ehrenreich), Chewbacca (Joonas Suotamo), Lando Calrissian (Donald Glover), Qi'Ra (Emilia Clarke); check them out -LSB-...]
After cutting away most of the subplots (including much of his own character's), Russell mapped out the production schedule and met with Cosmatos every evening to discuss the next day's scenes.
The ending captured the very spirit of the novel I had written in ways that I could never have imagined or anticipated, and as for the music, it resonated with the love of the two young men, so much so that the final scene with Elio and Sufjan's song stayed with me long, long after I walked out of the movie theater and, as happens so rarely, into the next morning and the evening after that.
Rounding out the package are inconsequential deleted and extended scenes, promotions for the next round of Marvel films, as well as a gag reel and assorted trailers.
We're still a couple weeks out from seeing Doctor Strange in the United States, but next week brings the film to many international markets, and that means some spoilers will start to spill onto the web, including details on both of the credits scenes (which have been screened for press already).
Some other reviews since the last update include the next step in the Running Out of Karma Johnnie To chronology, All About Ah - Long, and over st Seattle Screen Scene: The Coen Brothers's new film Hail, Caesar!
within The International Automotive Scene, part of the BHP Worldwide category; Leon Brennan, Honda UK's head honcho, has confirmed that the next - generation Honda CR - V, due to be out by 2017, will...
The typically all - weather all - wheel - drive brand that has thus far stayed out of the Hybrid scene has announced that it will introduce its first Hybrid model next week during the New York Auto Show.
This is a discussion on Next Gen BMW X1 Launched @ Auto Expo 2016 within The Indian Car Scene, part of the BHP India category; Big shout - out to Anshuman & Eddy for their coverage and photographs.
And I'll be sitting and thinking, plotting out the next couple of scenes that I'm going to work on for that day.
Yesterday, as I was searching for descriptions of San Francisco Theaters in 1880 (I am hoping to have a scene in a theater in my next historical mystery, Bloody Lessons), I ran across the following paragraph and laughed out loud.
The sleepiest of all sleepy English country villages is the scene of a most unusual event: on a lovely autumn night, everyone in Midwich passes out, to wake up seemingly unharmed the next morning.
My next book, Homesick Creek, takes place there, too, though with entirely different and unrelated characters — except for Roy, the bartender at the Wayside, who continues to drift in and out of scenes.
Next comes the adventure by sea in a small group setting accompanied by a professional tour guide, you'll launch your kayak from the sandy beaches into the sea to paddle right next to the sea lions, chase the dolphins that are often spotted, and paddle into the sea cave that is like a scene from right out of Pirates of the CaribbNext comes the adventure by sea in a small group setting accompanied by a professional tour guide, you'll launch your kayak from the sandy beaches into the sea to paddle right next to the sea lions, chase the dolphins that are often spotted, and paddle into the sea cave that is like a scene from right out of Pirates of the Caribbnext to the sea lions, chase the dolphins that are often spotted, and paddle into the sea cave that is like a scene from right out of Pirates of the Caribbean.
All of this, and more — not to mention there's the entire indie scene putting out gems like Layers of Fear: Legacy on Switch next year.
At the very beginning of the game you're thrown in prison in one scene, and then broken out during the next.
The scene with The Butcher is particularly disturbing, and the lady sitting next to me walked right out of the theater!
Granted, some elements still look a bit rough around the edges, but remember that The Crew isn't due out until next year so there's still plenty of polish to be applied behind the scenes.
The number one thing that annoys me the most about this game above all else though, is the meaningless backtracking without getting any kind of reward from it all, and just to top it all off, you'll end up going through various different areas of the field map, which are all surrounded by monsters, you finish the mission that you set out for, sit through a long cut - scene, but guess what happens next?
One second you can be taking in an intimate scene between allies and the next you're blood will be pumping as you successfully take out a gang of 10 + enemies with energetic music in the background.
This of course is all the evidence the police need and nobody really knows what happens next because nobody cares about the game, at least, not past being weirded out by this one scene.
Square Enix has released a look at one of the iconic CGI scenes from Final Fantasy X as it appears in the upcoming HD Remaster, due out next week.
Today, on the 62nd floor of a midtown skyscraper next to a tricked - out iMac — on which Photoshop has replaced Polaroid — Samaras, 75, couldn't seem further from the old loft scene, although his walls are adorned with dozens of beaded necklaces and self - portraits dating back to high school.
1995 Cotter, Holland, Beneath the Barrage, The Modern's Little Show, The New York Times, April 7, p. C27 Hainley, Bruce Next to Nothing: The Art of Tom Friedman, Artforum, November, pp. 4 - 5, pp. 73 - 77 Kastner, Jeffrey, lo - fo, Frieze, September / October, pp. 72 - 73 Kim Levin, Choices, The Village Voice, May 2, p. 11 Mitchell, Charles Dee, «Critical Mass»: More Than Meets the Eye, Dallas Morning News, February 3 Narbutas, Siaurys, Modernus Menas Padeda Atlaidziau Zvelgti I Pasauli, Lietuvos Rytui, August Rich, Charles, At MoMA: A «Mad» Muse, The Hartford Courant, April 1 Schjeldahl, Peter, Struggle and Flight, The Village Voice, April 18, p. 79 1994 Connors, Thomas, Evanston Art Center, New Art Examiner, May Green, David, Doors of Perception, Burelle's, May, p. 18, p. 23 Mollica, Franco, Tema Celeste, Autumn, p. 64 Perretta, Gabriele, Flash Art (Italian edition), Summer Romano, Gianni, Tom Friedman, Zoom, no. 12 Romano, Gianni, In and Out Liquid Architectures (Through a Few Objects, Temporale, no. 31, pp. 34 - 37 Romano, Gianni, Interactive Child, Arquebuse, May, pp. 24 - 25 Tager, Alisa, Emerging Master of Metamorphosis, The Los Angeles Times, May 3, p. F1, p. F8 Trione, Vincenzo, De Soto, Ulisside del Bello, Il Mattino, May 27 1993 Artner, Alan, Sharp Conceptual Show Dares to be Different, The Chicago Tribune, January 22, section 7, p. 56 Auer, James, There's No More Than a Hairbreath Between Art, Reality in This Exhibit, Milwaukee Journal, January 17 Blair, Dike, review, Flash Art, November / December, pp. 112 - 114 Flynn, Patrick J.B. review, Hair, Artpaper, February Heartney, Eleanor, New York, Dans les Galeries, Art Press, October, pp. 24 - 28 Humphrey, David, New York Fax, Art issues, May / June, pp. 32 - 33 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, February 23, p. 65 Lillington, David, Times, Time Out, June 16 Lillington, David, Times, Metropolis M, Winter, pp. 47 - 49 Nesbitt, Lois, Artforum, Summer, pp. 111 - 112 Paine, Janice T. Hair Pieces: Exhibition Worth Combing, Mikwaukee Sentinel, January 8, p. 8D Shepley, Carol Ferring, Tom Friedman Shapes Art Out of Everyday Things, St. Louis Post - Dispatch, January 14, p. 3E Southworth, Linda, An Extraordinary Exhibition at Arts and Letters, The Washington Heights Citizen & The Inwood News, February 28, pp. 10 - 11 1992 Bernardi, David, News Reviews, Flash Art, May / June, p. 149 Cameron, Dan, In Praise of Smallness, Art & Auction, April, pp. 74 - 76 Faust, Gretchen, New York in Review, Arts, March, p. 79 Kahn, Wolf, Connecting Incongruities, Art in America, November, pp. 116 - 121 Marrs, Jennifer, Simple Style With a Complex Meaning, Courier, October 2, p. 15, p. 18 Smith, Roberta, Casual Ceremony, The New York Times, January 3, section C 1991 Artner, Alan, Friedman Debuts with Winning Simplicity, The Chicago Tribune, February 22, section 7, p. 56 Barckert, Lynda, The Work of Art, The Reader, March 1 Brunetti, John, New City, March 14, p. 14 Heartney, Eleanor, Art in America, December, p. 118 Hixson, Kathryn, Chicago in Review, Arts, May, p. 108 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, September 17, p. 104 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, February 8, section 7, p. 68 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, August 30, section 7, p. 54 Goings On About Town, The New Yorker, September 23, p. 12 Palmer, Laurie, Artforum, May, p. 151 Patterson, Tom, Trio of Solos: Thoughts on Three Current Shows at SECCA, Winston - Salem Journal, September 1, p. C6 Smith, Roberta, Art in Review, The New York Times, September 13, p. C5 1990 Harris, Patty, Four Summer Art Shows, Downtown, August 29, pp. 12A - 13A Levin, Kim, Choices The Village Voice, August 7, p. 102
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