Sentences with phrase «sense out of that story»

No way to make common sense out of that story, which is maybe the point of the story.
Again, either you buy into this fantasy or you'll be left out in the cold, trying to make sense out of the story's intangible, incomprehensible qualities (not unlike the 1980 cult smash Somewhere in Time).
It's too bad that Anarchy Reigns can't wring a little more sense out of its story, because its characters are bright, lively - looking designs that deserve more exposition and attention.

Not exact matches

So - called variable pay plans have been around for more than a century, and were first used by industrial magnates including George Eastman and William Procter out of sense of social conscience, writes Rutgers economist Joseph Blasi in this Huffington Post story.
To make a long story short, his narcissism and vanity crowed out any sustained sense of personal responsibility to those....
Plus, your stories start out okay and then the endings are just thrown together and I'm left with a sense of «what the hell was that all about?»
It was a matter of setting out the larger story, the narrative framework, which makes sense of and brings order to God's world and God's people.»
And Yahweh is jewish terminology is the same now that mean Allah and Yahweh are the same being but christian god is unknown I don't know what he is, And Muhammad in the Qur» an is the last of all Prophets and Messengers and is known as Rehmat ul alimeen the mercy of the world he forgive his most bitterest enemies who tortured him and his followers for believing in one true God.Now Muhammad never try to fake a miracle, the pig is forbidden to eat even in the jewish testament and so even here bible agrees but I don't know why christians eat pork.Secondly wine was forbidden because Muhammad's companions saw the evil in it.So please don't speak without having proper knowledge or Blurting out made up stories that actually have no sense, the jews call Jesus the false prophet, Sorcerer, Necromancer etc would you beieve those stories or be angry.Surely we both know the answer
What stands out in Luke are the depth of his human sympathies, his sense of wonder, amazement, and joy at the power of the gospel, his poetic insight which led him not only to tell the Christmas story in a way that captivates old and young alike after nineteen centuries, but also to incorporate such lovely poems as the «Magnificat» of Mary, Zachariah's «Benedictus,» and Simeon's «Nunc Dimittis.»
We are eager to wring the lesson and the hope and the story out of our lives in order to make sense of them, we are ready to move on!
Whereas Fackre has enough sense of history to make clear that it is never just a matter of the sum of our individual stories constituting «our story» — but the story of a people in time as God works his purpose out historically — there is the danger that others will not be as historical - minded.
What's amazing about it is that we can often make up a story out of it that almost makes sense.
But no matter what lens one uses — 21st century or xxBC, there's no way to make any sense out of that «story
When Christians» worship is understood in this fashion as a «practice» (in the somewhat technical sense of «practice» we have adopted), then James Hopewell's description of a congregation turns out to be unusually fruitful: «A congregation is a group that possesses a special name and recognized members who assemble regularly to celebrate a more universally practiced worship but who communicate with each other sufficiently to develop intrinsic patterns of conduct, outlook, and story
And like Genesis, it is a story told not out of academic interest in recovering the distant past and retelling that past for its own sake alone, but because the subsequent scenes of that history, including every «present» scene, are given sense and meaning only when viewed against this formative, exciting, and in every way remarkable first scene of the Exodus events.
Most if not all religions have a story to make sense out of the human instinct that we are somehow deficient, that something has to be done about it, and that since this something has been done everything's okay.
For the religious mind capable of going deeply into something beyond the sense perception, these symbols - the cross and the lotus - must be telling painful stories as well edifying ones, crying out in despair as well as in hope.
You say that Science has disproved stories from the Bible, well Scientists once said that there was an edge of the world and you would fall off of it if you went to the edge... they said that the Earth was the center of the universe and that the sun revolved around us... You are all so quick to throw out Christianity because you think 1 story doesn't make sense to you and couldn't have happened how it says in the Bible, yet so willing to follow scientists that constantly revise their theories and change what you inevitably believe.
My guess would be that they are out there for Draxler, which makes sense, as it links up with the older stories of Ozil tapping up afew of his young German team mates, during the Euro's.
This is a capital lie even though they are entitle to their opnion but is left for the reader to take the senses out of nonsense opinion or story they made.
Agreed in the literal sense, but semantically there's a subtle distinction between «fake» and «false»; Trump mostly seems to be targetting non-stories, i.e. deceptive tactics that are intended to mislead, rather than outright falsehoods: inviting panels of biased «experts»; cutting people off after asking a loaded question; making news stories out of out - of - context soundbytes or by association, etc..
And my editor at the time did not have quite the same sense of fun that I do — she let the air out of the story — so the piece, I felt, was not able to capture the true joys and surprises of flatulence research.
it causes a kind of paranoid sense of persecution in the people who challenge authority, and that is after the typically expensive problem is solved, (listen to the horror stories coming out of the many independent media sources we all blissfully use every day without realizing the expense and hassles they deal with daily).
These rumours have fueled a huge amount of news stories over the years, but thankfully there are some people out there who have some sense, like Scitec Nutrition.
Love her story, her sense of style, and knowing that she is out there on her tiny island rocking these awesome scarves!
And no, of course you don't know how talented they're going to turn out to be, but you kind of get a sense, a nose for people, when you're exchanging ideas, when you're telling each other stories, about their vision.
His aim is to take the commodification out of fashion and create clothes that, like Band of Outsiders strived to do, are meant to be lived in: «I started thinking about brands and how the greatest of brands can actually be something meaningful, how they can create a sense of community and commonality, entertain us and tell stories and help us escape — and so I started thinking about this idea of utopia, building a perfect world from scratch.»
He sucked the magic and joy out of this world and while I appreciate movies are not books the stories they are based on still need to make some sort of sense.
In this fresh new look at a classic story, Russell Brand reinvents the role of loveable billionaire Arthur Bach, an irresponsible charmer who has always relied on two things to get by: his limitless fortune and the good sense of his lifelong nanny and best friend Hobson (Helen Mirren), to keep him out of trouble.
Compared with (sigh) «American Horror Story,» the tale itself makes a certain amount of sense and like any good thrill ride, spaces out the scary parts just enough to make them truly scary.
As an adaptation, the transposition of Hardy's story to rural India makes a lot of sense — the double standards applied to the sexes play out quite well.
The resulting temporal choppiness from not being clear from the start not only continuously takes us out of the story to try to catch up with it when we're finally given enough information for it to make sense, but it also reveals just how manipulative the device is in order to try to load up all of the emotional beats for whatever version of a climax the story can muster up.
The sense of unease continues as the story moves to Pakistan where Dan (Jason Clarke) is busy trying to pressure information out of a detainee (Reda Kateb).
i actually wanted to give this game a 10 i swear right hand to god but after reading pcforever's review i actually cant... im not a pc player so graphics a perfect to meand i like the story and i do nt know what kind of stuff he was doing but i constantly found myself running out of gold and i had made all daedric armor and weapons early on before 25 % of main quest was even done so i needed to buy nothing but houses and crap... definitely cant go without giving this game a playthrough it is an absolute must... Hopefully the make it a little more interactive in a sense!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Although this one does spiral out for a long time beyond the point where you think the story reaches a natural close, this is an instance where he delivers a velvet - encased razorblade, a sense of cheery compromise which is actually an admission of life as being dull, repetitive and moralistic.
In the course of his research, Lipman finds unexpected visual and thematic rhymes between past and present, cutting together archival clips and present - day interviews with a musician's sense of rhythm, often letting his voiceover narration drop out of the mix as the images and sounds tell their own story.
It's a story of same - sex love, set in 1983, but Call Me by Your Name avoids so many doom - and - gloom tropes of the genre; Chalamet's Elio is confused and out of place, but there's never any sense of harm that would come to him by embracing his true feelings.
In the best Pixar movies, «Wall - E,» «Inside Out» and «Toy Story 3» among them, you get the sense of filmmakers boldly and brilliantly conquering new terrain.
There are a few weak attempts at jump scares, but they make little sense in context of the story and feel out of place.
In The Home and the World, the director places his multifaceted characters within rich, shadowy compositions — many crucial scenes play out in candlelit interiors — and tells their story with a growing sense of impending doom.
Furthermore, many of the side missions flesh out the supporting cast in ways that'll make later story developments have more emotional impact — or just make sense in the first place.
With a single new movie coming out, it makes a lot of sense to do the story pack.»
Featuring James Corden as the voice of Peter, the new Rabbit comes from director Will Gluck, who has injected the usual sense of hyper - kinetic action, contemporary references and a poppy soundtrack, along with expanding out the story.
So a story within a story plays out and yet this detailed, layered and sprawling narrative has a lightness of touch thanks to its great sense of humour and Anderson's passionate hand.
As it turns out, there is a deleted verse from «Life's a Happy Song» that addresses Walter's unhappiness, as well as an extended Tex Richman origin story that, however clunky, makes more sense out of what exactly is going on during The Muppets» denouement.
There's any number of reasons to love Luca Guadagnino's love story: the attention to detail, the introduction to the young star - in - the - making Timothée Chalamet, the scenery, the sensualness, the sense that someone has figured out how to use Armie Hammer correctly, that scene - stealing peach.
In the hands of del Toro, the strangest of premises is transformed into one of the most consistently beautiful love stories to have played out on the big screen in years — and it's largely down to the strong sense of innocence and humanity that stops it from playing out like an interspecies freak show.
There's a sense of camaraderie and accomplishment that only comes from the intricate way that Jackson lets the story play out.
So in a sense the new film is fan fiction of the original from the start, akin to later James Bond films when producers had run out of original stories to adapt.
It just doesn't make sense and, while some people won't care, I found myself being taken out of the story a bit at times because of it.
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