Sentences with phrase «portrayed as drunk»

One character is portrayed as drunk at a party.
One is portrayed as drunk.

Not exact matches

Realize that, according to truth as portrayed in scripture and not Catholicism, partaking in communion as a sinner is like drinking damnation to your soul.
From scene to scene (and sometimes within the same scene), Rex will be portrayed one moment as an incompetent, idealistic drunk, unable to take care of his family and then, within moments, it will portray him as a kind, caring, intelligent and charismatic father.
But the editors also maintained what today seems like a naïve psychological perspective, portraying liquor as the cause of degradation rather than emphasizing that poverty or oppression might lead to drinking.
Besides the conditions of society itself, under which family and friends had primary responsibility for the care of the dying and the dead, memento mon were spread throughout culture: in the church's art, in morality plays like Everyman, in drinking songs, in the ordinary artifacts of everyday life (e.g., in Austria a towel hanger portraying a human form split down the middle: one half a beautiful young woman, the other a skeleton) To be sure, the specter of death (and judgment) has been used as a form of social control.
As a father I am offended by people, stories, etc. that portray fathers / men as bumbling idiots that can only take out the trash and drink beeAs a father I am offended by people, stories, etc. that portray fathers / men as bumbling idiots that can only take out the trash and drink beeas bumbling idiots that can only take out the trash and drink beer.
A three - page report commissioned by Klein from Loeb & Loeb, a law firm, attempts to portray his accuser as inappropriate and unstable based on the fact that she was a) drinking (with Klein), and b) extended a casual invitation for him to attend her family's Passover celebration.
As he grew balder and stockier, he remained in demand for middle - aged character roles, often portraying wistful drunks or philosophical ne'er - do - wells.
While the politically charged story will awaken outrage at the hate crimes it realistically portrays, what really brings the horror home is a superb Diane Kruger as a hard - drinking user of recreational drugs, proudly tattooed and unapologetic for her life outside the norms.
But the others - wacky Spud (Ewen Bremner) manipulative Sick Boy (Jonny Lee Miller), naive Tommy (Kevin McKidd), precocious Diane (Kelly Macdonald) and belligerent drunk Begbie (Robert Carlyle)- are also important, as they portray different sides of the lowlife experience.
Sarah Gadon portrays the future queen in a most respectable manner, while Bell Powley shows a giggly bouncy Princes Margaret who can't stop drinking and ends up intoxicated.Emily Watson plays the Queen Mother as a woman who is concerned mostly with appropriateness, while Rupert Everett presents King George as a royal with a normal speech (in real life he had a speech problem), while smoking cigarettes on every occasion.
However, Wood portrays Daisy's childlike nature with such overemphasis that it is difficult to believe the naiveté in her actions as she experiences many firsts — her first time flying on a plane; her first time drinking champagne; her first time on a roller coaster.
Teenagers curse, drink, fuck, and more as they try new experiences and navigate their way to adulthood, so it's always nice when a movie actually portrays them with authenticity.
Smoking and drinking are portrayed as luxurious activities and a verbal reference to heroin is heard.
The media tends to portray the teenage world as one where drinking and sex is taken for granted.
No matter how many movies portray college as solely studying and drinking, there are tons of other ways you can spend your time.
Maybe there's a moral undertone, an obligation to portray drinking as bad to avoid glorifying it to an audience of kids or young adults.
The magazine had published a parody of an actual advertisement, changed to portray Falwell (a well - known preacher) as an incestuous drunk.
These results are consistent with the conclusion that reckless driving in movies directly impacted adolescent future reckless driving practices, whereas frequent overall screen exposure may have stimulated reckless driving through exposure to a variety of other risk - taking behaviors such as excessive drinking, movie violence and their cumulative impact on sensation seeking tendencies [35], [62] Previous research indicates that adolescents who frequently watch R - rated movies, rated such for portraying higher levels of risk taking behavior and violence [35] show increases in sensation seeking over time [63].
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