Sicario is a well written story, however the film does fall short in some scenes with
slow moving plot points and a handful of unnecessary scenes.
Not exact matches
Low Inflation Tests World's Central Banks Inflation is
slowing across the developed world despite ultralow interest rates and unprecedented money - printing campaigns, posing a dilemma for the Fed and other major central banks as they
plot their next policy
moves.
Less a
plot - driven Western oater, Monte Walsh is more a
slow -
moving but satisfying contemplation on the end days of the cowboy life.
The acting's very good, but the
plot is extremely
slow moving.
It's actually a pretty
slow moving drama for most of the runtime and then within the last 10 minutes, the
plot goes crazy and leaves the viewer with a weird feeling.
There's a genuine sense of dramatic tension as the
plot moves forward and the build - up has the right amount of punch to carry it over the
slow parts.
The
plot, courtesy of the great Elmore Leonard, crackles and pops, and Soderbergh knows enough to keep it
moving, but also when to
slow it down.
The
slow -
moving plot and character development suggest something deeper to say, however the audience may well be too anaesthetised to appreciate its subtleties.
She does just that in Olivier Assayas» Personal Shopper, a strange,
slow -
moving psychological thriller that's less about
plot than mood.
What ensues is a
slow -
moving and not nearly funny enough road trip, with Collins J overdoing the acerbity, while Collins P fails to strike up the convincing romantic chemistry with a game Franco Nero (he strips off for some skinny - dipping) that the
plot requires.
However, there was one major problem that the movie suffered from: it often
moved at an extremely
slow pace, so much so that it prevented me from understanding and following along with the complex
plot at times.
These films are often as
slow -
moving as Robert Bresson, tortuously
plotted, and shot through with moral ambiguity as well as displays of anti-heroism tainted by betrayal and duplicity.
Powerpoint containing a cartoon video of a car
moving and
slowing down for students to log data and then
plot a graph.
While it may be a little
slow -
moving in parts, this novel manages to include an assassination
plot, a secret lover, a secret baby, some unpublished Beatles songs, a kidnapping, an overbearing father and witness intimidation.
Waiting's achingly
slow -
moving plot serves to mirror the main character's dutiful 18 - year wait in communist China for his forbidden true love, and in just over 300 pages, that device works.
At parts i felt like it was a bit
slow, like trying to fill the pages rathen than
move the
plot along, but the last 100 pages were so awesome that i just have to read the third book.
Far more of the
plot revolves around her than it did in the first book, and the story also
moves along at a faster clip, with few
slow spots (if any).
The first few chapters are a little
slow because the novel is told from the perspective of seven different characters in three different persons - first, third, and the slightly awkward second - which takes a bit of getting to grips with, but once the groundwork is laid the
plot moves at a fair clip, offering many reasons to keep reading, not least of which is the opportunity to experience a different side of Bolivia from what most of us imagine - suffice to say, it ain't all ponchos and alpaca!
She fleshes out every beat of the story, which makes it a little
slow to start, but it proves to be a very rewarding strategy as the
plot moves along.