Sentences with phrase «ridiculous moments as»

The 2011 version has its share of ridiculous moments as well (angry dancing, anyone?)

Not exact matches

the cheese eating surrender monkey has screwed up again we all know that now so we have to hope to get our real quality players performing to full potential that is ozil sanchez wishere carzola... i am not sure there is a combo with all four and at this moment wilshere and sanchez are the only ones looking pretty decent and as wellbeck needs to be integrated those positions are settled... i am a big ozil fan and really believe wenger is failing to get best out of him by playing him out of position so cant we play some kind of diamond with him at the top feeding to a front line of sanchez and wellbeck... for me neither flamini nor arteta add anything to the team so i think playing to attacking strengths is the only option right now... but its really a ridiculous state of affairs we have been left in... throwing caution to the wind i would go for
Another showcase of his supreme skill was this ridiculous save, as Alonso got a bit too low into the corner and had a pretty big moment at 220 mph.
At the final moments of the 2016 electioneering campaign when all parties should be deploying their best arsenals to win over undecided voters, the New Patriotic Party (NPP), sensing defeat, has taken political decency a notch lower and sprung up what could best be described as the most ridiculous story in the 2016 electioneering season.
Played from its opening whimsical guitar score as a sweet story about friends, the dynamic of a real - life, Apatow - brand bromance is prominent, and makes for a few funny bonding moments, like when Tommy has Greg loudly rehearse a scene in a restaurant as a ridiculous gesture of fearlessness.
Charachters are ridiculous, plot is unbelievable (in a bad way), and even the Kodak - moments isn't working as well as it used to back in 1998.
Isabelle is busy fending off the thinly veiled advances of a gallerist (Bruno Podalydes), when suddenly a thin stranger (Paul Blain) with an incongruously, hilariously grave expression and a Jacques Brel horse mouth comes into her purview, and she stands to meet him on the dance floor as though they had a pre-appointed meeting, and they sway together in a moment of the ridiculous sublime, as James sings ``... I found a thrill to press my cheek to.»
Jackson's sense of the ridiculous hasn't lessened, so whilst proceedings don't get as OTT as, say, the dinosaur stampede in King Kong, there are some pretty outlandish moments.
And finally here come the supplementary complaints: Kate Beckinsale (Underworld: Evolution) looks ridiculous in this film, not only as the spineless wife of an annoying slob, but because she's completely unbelievable as the oh so clichéd stay at home mum who looks like she's just walked out of a hairdresser's at any given moment.
The dramatic scenes are hilariously ridiculous (often unintentionally so); many of the performances feel stilted and off - beat; and the combination of 3D visual design and an attempt to use more on - location settings (as opposed to sound stage or green screen) results in moments that feel unusually amateurish for The Wachowskis.
Near the end of the pilot, there's a scene that qualifies as both the year's most ridiculous TV moment and the best ever use of an infant in a zombie series.
The primary flaw in Get Over It stems from the uninspired script that supplants genuine insight and wit for ridiculous slapstick and some of toilet humor so raunchy that I almost dry - heaved from moments that included Berke's almost landing face first into a steaming pile of horse manure only to have the same horse urinate all over his face, and late a disgusting scene involving vomiting in a party punchbowl only to have others drink the putrid concoction in bewilderment as to it's unique chunky texture.
A scene featuring a deranged Anna Faris playing herself got most of the attention, but it's cross-cut with an even funnier moment: Keegan - Michael Key sitting in his minivan with some hardcore killers, trying — successfully, as it turns out — to convince them that George Michael is truly «O.G.» It's the sort of sublimely ridiculous moment that makes you wish these guys hadn't needed to expend their brainpower on coming up with a story for Keanu, which suffers when it tries to further its own silly plot but glimmers when it just lets its stars get silly.
I'll give Christian Gudegast credit for orchestrating the most ridiculous «caught cheating» moment I've witnessed in quite some time, but then, as the film so often does, a single too - perfect - for - reality line brings momentum to a screeching halt.
The prologue is a visual mess of strobe lights and filter effects (A party montage is joylessly similar, using various camera speeds), and when Carrie Anne is on the loose, Tonderai offers only cheap, anticlimactic startle moments (The most ridiculous one eyes a couple making out in a car as Carrie Anne makes her way toward them).
The cover mechanics are acceptable most of time, but we encoutnered several instances where the view was completely obstructed through the fault of some ridiculous camera panning as well as moments where Gallahad was averse to taking cover where we wanted.
The two most vivid examples on my mind at the moment are «It's Global Warming, Stupid,» a much - shared essay in Bloomberg Businessweek, and an effort by Anthony Watts, inspired by a ridiculous U.S. News Sandy - warming poll, to list scientists and commentators for and against global warming as the storm's cause.
Of course, anyone who is even the least bit familiar with the amount of work involved with bringing a new product like this to market knew that notion was ridiculous: As of the moment that the first Surface tablets debuted, Microsoft officially became a PC vendor.
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