Sentences with phrase «really in a quandary»

Well, the parks are really in a quandary because they're supposed to be conserving a landscape, which is kind of hard with climate change.

Not exact matches

The churches have really not understood how lonely and in how much of a moral quandary people are during a divorce.»
There's more to these findings than just lofty philosophical quandaries, though: If ravens really do possess a level of social cognition comparable to humans and other large primates, the birds might serve as better animal models to study this kind of behavior in the lab — which could help scientists understand why some humans are better at this kind of inference than others, and why some individuals can't manage it at all.
In spite of its fanciful editing and Jonny Greenwood's sleazy score, You Were Never Really Here is rather minimalist, offering slivers of story and characterization, dwelling on inanimate objects while eschewing human complexities, never pondering the moral quandaries of Joe's vocation or methods.
So for a while, Fiorvante has no problem selling himself for sex (or moral or ethical quandaries don't seem to bother him), and the elderly Murray seemingly takes like a fish to water in drumming up clients (it's not really explained how he does it, but for the sake of the movie, just roll with it).
Garland is clearly interested in picking apart the metaphysical quandaries that come from artificial intelligence, though is consistently weighed down by a leaden, tricksy plot which never really convinces.
It's not much of one, though, since it's clear from the beginning that Anwar is an innocent victim of a major misunderstanding (Had he been guilty — even in some minor way — that would have really produced a quandary, probably less for Freeman but more for the audience.).
However, it was not the gargantuan «Torqued Ellipses» by Richard Serra that stuck it to the man — his work is sold by world - renowned powerhouse Gagosian Gallery — but the cackling faux - bird audio «Birdcalls» (1972/1981) by pioneer sound artist Louise Lawler resonating throughout the cherry blossom west garden that really put the art market in a quandary.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z