Sentences with phrase «scene in that movie where»

There's a scene in the movie where he goes to a Bible amusement park where there is a singing and dancing Jesus.
Remember there was a scene in the movie where you're playing tennis?
There is a brilliant scene in the movie where Justin Timberlake and Mila Kunis break into the Hollywood sign, and he ends up having to be airlifted off it by the police.
They is this one scene in this movie where these homeless people are hiding underground trying to get away from this horrible event and they are hiding in complete darkness and nobody can't see them.
They is this one scene in this movie where these
«There is a scene in that movie where they pick a rose,» he said.
There's literally a scene in this movie where a character yells «what are those!»
There's an early scene in that movie where Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee meets with his publisher Kay Graham, who implores Bradlee to lighten the style section's coverage of President Nixon's daughter and her White House wedding.
Now consider the scene in this movie where the girls go into a men's room and do not understand that in a men's room a hole in the wall is almost never merely an architectural detail.
There is a really special scene in the movie where Jake explains to Lainey how to masturbate.
This is reminiscent of the scene in the movie where Spider - Man briefly tangos with Star - Lord after Ebony Maw's ship has arrived on the planet Titan.
The movie's best moments, as with Rock's best stand - up routines, come through his observations on the racial, gender, and public policy quips, which truly comes through during a bit where Rock actually takes the mic to do some stand - up — perhaps the one scene in the movie where he absolutely feels 100 % in his element.

Not exact matches

I love watching animated movies in theaters full of children where I feel less insecure about laughing super-loud and gasping at scary scenes.
The sweetest parts of the movie occur in scenes between these two characters where they begin to understand one another better.
It is fitting, I think, that the beginning of the movie incorporates a court scene where one, Rubin (Rooster) Cogburn, an officer of the court (a «marshall») is questioned about his killing of a family of bushwhackers and murders out in the «nations».
Those who were lucky enough to be pulled or pushed, a year or so ago, to the Beatles» first movie, A Hard Day's Night, will recall the enchanting scene in which the four of them escape from the prison - like television studio, where worldly men are trying to get them to perform properly, and flee to an open field for a few surrealistic moments of jumping, dancing, abandon.
Do you remember the scene where Christina Applegate and her are getting ready to do the movie montage in the dressing room before they go to Peter's wedding?
Remember the scene in the movie, «Notting Hill», where everyone fights over the remaining brownie?
Ancelotti is currently taking some time out from football management after being let go by Real Madrid at the end of the 2014/15 campaign, and is said to have already filmed his scene in the movie in Vancouver, where his wife Mariann is from (via Metro).
You know the scene in the dirty movies, the one where the girl gets stuff all over her face?
It wasn't until after I moved here in 1989 that I slowly learned where certain movie scenes were filmed.
Like that scene in, whatever, Alice in Wonderland, the original movie, where suddenly, everything wakes up.
That totally reminds me of that movie scene in Steel Magnolias where the Mother of the Groom made a red velvet Groom's cake in the shape of an armadillo!
I was sitting watching Santa Claus the Movie in which there is a scene where the homeless boy Joe is stood staring through the window.
OK, this was already the cutest (albeit cheesiest) scene in movie history, where Ryan Gosling recites his legendary «If you're a bird, I'm a bird» line, but it was made even better by McAdams» vintage swimsuit.
And so the pair decided to start a website where customers could buy products they'd seen on TV and in movies, like the Oakley sunglasses Tom Cruise wore in Mission: Impossible, or the backpack Leonardo DiCaprio wore in the opening scene of The Beach.
If you saw the movie Trainwreck you may be thinking about the final scene where Amy Schumer's dancing like a fool in a Knicks girl uniform at Madison Square Garden to the song (kind of a life goal, how fun would that be?)
What other filmmakers would start a major superhero movie with a scene where a rich couple find out their infant is deformed, lock him in a cage, and throw him into the sewer?
There was a wonderful scene in the funny Hollywood movie about internet dating, «Must Love Dogs,» where our heroine, Diane Lane, and hero, John Cusack wanted to get physically intimate and realized they didn't have a condom with them.
There's never that scene we are accustomed to seeing in lesser movies, where there's a sad score in the background when we are shown tearjerking material.
The movie approaches the subject of homosexuality without the usual gay - bashing, in a scene where the guys trade one - liners beginning «I know you're gay because» and their reasons show more insight than prejudice.
In all seriousness, it's almost inconceivable that such a boring movie could be made from a story that starts with a mutant rat terrorizing a space station, ends with a 60 - foot crocodile devastating Chicago, and peaks with a scene where a silverback gorilla flips off the star of HBO's «Ballers.»
The movie comes to a head with a final conversation at a beachside restaurant, an exhilaratingly clever and ambiguous scene in which we must decide what is happening and where our sympathies lie.
It's kind of hard to know where to begin with what's wrong in Traffik, a movie where every scene takes about twice as long as it feels like it should, and the characters far too often make an escalating series of implausible and / or stupid decisions.
It's in these scenes where I felt the film became a real movie.
IT SUCKS, IT MAKES NO **** SENSE * SPOILER * HE GOES BACK IN TIME IN THE FINAL SCENE OF THE FIRST MOVIE, SHOWS HOW THE GUY GET STABBED AND THEN JESSE KILLS HIM * SPOILER END * THROW **** IN WHOEVER WROTE THIS, AGAIN THE HORROR TYPE MOVIE WHERE THE ENTITY CAN DO EVERYTHING
But one last thing... in the previews, they showed a scene where Lily and CZJ open their doors to come face to face with brick walls... did I miss that scene in the movie?
Those who criticized Portman in GARDEN STATE will likely have a field day with Hudson's similarly saintly character, although Hudson's able to give her a bit of an edge, and has easily the movie's best scene where she comforts and confronts Patinkin's miserly dad, who earlier puts her down for only being half - Jewish, and encouraging her husband's idiotic dreams.
When Cheadle said this, it was his first day working on the movie, filming a scene where he and several other Avengers land in Wakanda.
The defense mechanisms used by Oliver to keep himself emotionally disengaged from Jordana (most keenly revealed in one of the movieâ $ ™ s best scenes, where Oliver compulsively finds excuses not to accompany her to the hospital to visit her dying mother), are echoed in the distancing tactics used by Ayoade in the movie itself.
Blu - ray Highlight: In addition to an excellent six - part documentary that runs the entire gamut of production — from location shooting in Romania, to Nicolas Cage's (creepy) performance capture of the Ghost Rider, to special effects and more — the Blu - ray also includes a feature similar to Warner Bros.» Maximum Movie Mode where directors Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor dissect the film (sometimes pausing it to discuss certain scenes in more detail) with the help of behind - the - scenes footagIn addition to an excellent six - part documentary that runs the entire gamut of production — from location shooting in Romania, to Nicolas Cage's (creepy) performance capture of the Ghost Rider, to special effects and more — the Blu - ray also includes a feature similar to Warner Bros.» Maximum Movie Mode where directors Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor dissect the film (sometimes pausing it to discuss certain scenes in more detail) with the help of behind - the - scenes footagin Romania, to Nicolas Cage's (creepy) performance capture of the Ghost Rider, to special effects and more — the Blu - ray also includes a feature similar to Warner Bros.» Maximum Movie Mode where directors Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor dissect the film (sometimes pausing it to discuss certain scenes in more detail) with the help of behind - the - scenes footagin more detail) with the help of behind - the - scenes footage.
It's the kind of movie that starts out strong (in this case with a terrific scene where Mendelsohn and Reynolds meet at a poker table) and seems capable of toppling over into a pile of disappointment at any moment; its characters are similarly perched.
By the time the movie gets to the final climax, basically where every last character is suddenly together in a big obviously - in - a-warehouse-set with an impending action scene pitting them all against each other, I had completely lost interest in the story.
And any Washington movie must have a moment in the Oval Office in which a major lie gets told and a chase scene that lands us in the black enclave of Adams - Morgan, where the murder rate makes Washington the murder capitol of the world.
While the subject matter is the stuff that good films are made of, and the quality of the direction and acting are worthy of admiration, where The East fails is in the contrivances involved in the farfetched plotline and the unevenness in the thriller elements (such as a scene in which the cell dresses up to the nines to infiltrate a party for pharmaceutical bigwigs that would feel more at home in a Mission Impossible movie) that undermine what could have been a chilling and realistic story of corporations run amok.
Remember that scene in Idiocracy where a movie - theater audience enjoys an Oscar - winning film that's nothing but somebody's ass onscreen, just flatulating away?
All the other actors are trying to do their job seriously and trying to portray theirs characters at least as believable but you can tell that any time Adam, David, Rob, Chris, and Kevin where in a scene together they where just goofing off with each other rather than make a movie.
This is the kind of detective movie where scenes can take place anywhere so why not in a stripper bar or a porno shoot?
And while there's a nicely tentative quality to the scenes between Bob and Erik (whose wounded ambition is perfect for the handsomely bland Hartnett), the movie hits another level when it's behind the closed boardrooms of editors and publishers, and where characters like Alan Alda's managing editor can be observed manipulating people like a man calmly poking snakes in a box.
Director Corin Hardy and cinematographer Martijn Van Broekhuizen give the movie a dark, ominous look, particularly in the scenes set outdoors, where the woods seem to loom maliciously.
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