Sentences with phrase «seen warm receptions»

TIFF has been kind to British director Ben Wheatley, who's seen warm receptions for sharp - edged movies like Sightseers and High - Rise.
It was good to see the warm reception for the former Claret received from the Burnley fans.
While Echo has been a huge success for Amazon and Google Home has seen warm reception, it's unclear whether Facebook will be able to persuade people to put its own speakers in their home.

Not exact matches

Grandi went to the giant designer jeans company, which does some $ 250 million in annual sales, and found a warm reception from Chairman Joe Nakash and his brother Avi, both of whom saw no good reason why runners shouldn't have a chance to benefit from hard - won excellence.
But the relatively warm reception to the recommendation in the usually hostile tabloid press has seen a more confident approach from the committee when it comes to discussions around drug regulation.
Unusually for one of these projects, some material has seen the light of day: a trailer was released on the internet and the full pilot was screened at Comic - Con at 2011 to a warm reception.
My biggest regret was missing Jean - Luc Godard's Jury Prize winning Goodbye To Language, but thanks to its warm reception chances of seeing it released are much bigger than before the festival started.
The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival with a warm reception, then it played at SXSW (where I saw it), and it just recently showed at Hot Docs.
We may be in the minority on this, considering the warm reception that has greeted the film at festival screenings, but The Disaster Artist struck us as less a movie than an over-extended Funny Or Die skit packed with celebrity cameos — which is to say, it makes little sense if you haven't already seen The Room.
If your kids are having a Meltdown waiting for a chance to see Ice Age 2 again, then they are sure to give this DVD release a warm reception.
At the reception desk, we received a warm welcome and the check - in process was straightforward although it included checking our passports, something rarely seen in Europe these days.
In fact, many skeptics believe that the continued positive reception of catastrophic global warming theory is a function of the general scientific illiteracy of Americans and points to a need for more and better science education (see here for an overview of the climate debate that does not once use the ad hominem words «myth», «scam» or «lie»).
My educated guess is that the first professional journalism about that phrase as something supposedly tied to skeptic scientists (which I can't confirm yet, from not seeing the actual printouts) was seen in either in a Greenwire June 19/20 1991 fax report «Inside Track: Sowing the Seeds of Doubt in the Greenhouse», or in a pair of reports in The Energy Daily, June 24, 1991 «Greenhouse ads target «low income» women, «less educated» men» and / or July 2, 1991, «ICE gets cool reception at meeting on global warming
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