Sentences with phrase «so much commentary»

Not every case where the defense wins is a prosecution doomed from the beginning, but with no reasonable analysis of the verdict detailing why it was wrong and so much commentary on why it should never have started, one does have to ask, what were the prosecutors thinking?
The paintings are not so much a commentary but my memories and interpretations of the experience.
Wow, I see and read so much commentary online, and frankly this is, by far, the best explanation and detail on setting and trading with the shooting start setup.
Not since Amy Chua's «Why Chinese Mothers Are Superior» have I seen so much commentary and outrage concerning an article about a book!
I know there is so much commentary on the website.
How can so much commentary be generated from not believing in something?

Not exact matches

«We were able to record and include so much of my natural commentary throughout the gameplay.»
«The real problem with investigative journalism, and one of the reasons there isn't as much of it as its partisans so desperately desire, is that it often doesn't pan out,» observes John Podhoretz, once of the Weekly Standard and now editor of Commentary, discussing a Washington Post hit job on Senator Marco Rubio.
The movie is not a heavy - handed commentary on supernatural apologetics but it does challenge the viewer to consider that there is so much we don't know, and so much more for all of us to learn.
This thread has so much misinformation, inference, innuendo and commentary that I think it needs to be addressed and I will at a later date when I have time.
So far, therefore, Mark serves as a commentary on the kerygma, and explains why in even the very brief summaries of it which we have in Acts x and xiii so much stress is laid on the part taken by John the BaptisSo far, therefore, Mark serves as a commentary on the kerygma, and explains why in even the very brief summaries of it which we have in Acts x and xiii so much stress is laid on the part taken by John the Baptisso much stress is laid on the part taken by John the Baptist.
Your commentary adds a lot to it, but even with just the image, so much is said.
Lear marvels that so much of what passes for commentary on Socratic irony in Plato's dialogues has to do exclusively with the question of whether Socrates dissembles, whether he wears a mask of unknowing behind which lurks either certainty about important matters or skepticism, perhaps even nihilism.
As Robert Jenson suggests in his commentary on Ezekiel, also part of the Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible, this double role is not so much resolved as made clear and explicit in the crucifixion and Resurrection commentary on Ezekiel, also part of the Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible, this double role is not so much resolved as made clear and explicit in the crucifixion and Resurrection Commentary on the Bible, this double role is not so much resolved as made clear and explicit in the crucifixion and Resurrection of Christ.
The Navarre Bible, that wonderful commentary which has done so much to seed the wasteland of contemporary Biblical scholarship, refers in connection with the passage I quoted from Matthew (9:36) to words of St Margaret Mary Alacoque: «This Divine Heart is a great abyss which holds all good, and he commands that all his poor people should pour their needs into it.
Thanks so much for your commentary on this!
Apparently, the moderators do not know much about the tenets of Islam so one more time, the top five with commentary:
So much for thoughtful commentary.
There is so much interesting information, commentary, stories and respectful give and take shared here.
Hence why so much «analysis» and commentary has tried to depict the 3 May local election results as a set back for Labour.
«The commentary provided by Louise sums up why we love this element of shooting so much.
The commentary, by Lawrence Heaney of the Field Museum in Chicago, provides a timely reminder that Wallace was so much more than Darwin's sidekick or a footnote in the story of evolution.
For the US has witnessed an impressive range of cultural commentaries on the epidemic, exploring the conflicts and evasions that determine so much social policy, from safer sex campaigns to television soap operas.
And here, as in last year's I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry, Sandler interestingly attempts to blend genuine social commentary with copious gross - out humor in much the same way that Mel Brooks did in Blazing Saddles (a movie that, beyond the beans - around - the - campfire gags, wore its heart so firmly on its sleeve in favor of racial brotherhood that it stopped just short of singing «Kumbaya» to its audience); Sandler, who's admirably never been shy about proudly proclaiming his Jewishness, takes on xenophobia, suggests that Israelis and Palestinians CAN get along and — most controversially of all, perhaps — makes a case that disco music CAN be enjoyable in the right time and place.
It's so much easier to let the yammering that Cole does with James and with Sophie dominate the proceedings, and to stuff the moral and social commentary into a clever but cheap one - shot coda that comes during the closing credits.
It works as a snapshot of their lives, though perhaps not so much as a commentary on them.
Comics have never needed realism to create complicated character arcs or social commentary, and perhaps the reason Black Panther feels so much like an actual Marvel comic is that it expresses its ideas with unapologetically clashing color.
So the young man just bangs out a commentary on Frederick Douglass, all neatly typed, and hands it in before heading out, broken bone and all, to be pounded, tormented, humiliated, forced to eat dog food and so much more, for the privilege of joining the august societSo the young man just bangs out a commentary on Frederick Douglass, all neatly typed, and hands it in before heading out, broken bone and all, to be pounded, tormented, humiliated, forced to eat dog food and so much more, for the privilege of joining the august societso much more, for the privilege of joining the august society.
Audio commentaries don't get much better than Fincher's, though, so if you've yet to listen to one of his, do yourself a favor and check one out.
WHY: «Sausage Party» isn't a very subtle movie (the dialogue is laced with so much profanity that it feels like it was written by a bunch of prepubescent boys who just learned about swear words), but what the comedy lacks in maturity it makes up for with some clever commentary on faith, sexual temptation and the Palestine / Israel conflict.
She has so much that she has to internalize to make Georgina work, and it's a character upon which so much of Peele's social commentary hinges.
The pairing of act and music isn't so much farce as inane fodder for ensuring The House's removal from anything resembling genuine social commentary, but it also indulges the laziest form of cultural fantasy, where the awkward, middle - aged white couple is allowed to engage in cultural appropriation for a spell before returning to their dull middle - class lives, and all without consequence.
On another track, Savini offers an engaged, good - natured commentary that doesn't so much narrate the action as augment it with stuff like, «Those are real tears!»
The scene where the parents figure out how teens text sexual chatter via emojis is hilarious, so much so that if the movie had veered for more satire or commentary it would have worked better.
I learned so much by listening to the commentary track.
There's frankly so much to see here you might need another sitting to truly enjoy them all: • Feature Commentary with Director Doug Liman — Extremely informative look at the film's genesis, shooting, and post-editing.
There is an audio commentary with Barry Levinson where he only speaks every so often with a few comments — very much unlike most DVDs - plus a featurette Into the Unknown: Barry Levinson on The Bay.
There is so much surface noise, from the casual nudity to the Skrillex soundtrack to the clear social commentary about the fickle nature of youth culture to the Mallickian overtones of slow motion montages set to Franco's slow drawl of «Sprang Break foreeeeeeeevah.»
Audio Commentary with Nicolas Winding Refn and Elle Fanning — So much of Refn's work is left to interpretation, so it's wonderful to hear its creator talk about the film through his eyeSo much of Refn's work is left to interpretation, so it's wonderful to hear its creator talk about the film through his eyeso it's wonderful to hear its creator talk about the film through his eyes.
Other special mentions must also be given to Yorgos Lanthimos» The Killing of a Sacred Deer (a film I much preferred to his previous, and equally - divisive output), David Lowery's thoughtful and bravely - constructed A Ghost Story, and finally — perhaps disagreeably so to some of its admirers — Jordan Peele's Get Out, which I felt was an entertaining yet inferior social commentary to similar of the past such as The Wicker Man, Funny Games and Kill List.
Considering this is not so much an adaptation than a verbatim, Van Sant - style shot - for - shot redo, it would have been wonderful to include the entire pilot episode of this version with optional Cherry commentary track.
The main extra on Warner's New Year's Eve Blu - ray is a running commentary by Marshall, who not only falls into the trap of simply describing either the action or dialogue of a scene instead of imparting much background information and stories about the production (going unaddressed, disappointingly so, is the widely reported last - minute Heigl - for - Berry recast, with the latter rejoining the project in a smaller capacity once her schedule cleared), he does so in a sing - song fashion that presumably is supposed to come off folksy - friendly but quickly becomes more than a little obnoxiously self - amused.
With its frank discussion of female bodily functions and a balanced commentary on the shackles of modern twentysomething womanhood (neuroses, immaturity and all), the film is so much more than its third act abortion - themed twist.
(In the audio commentary one realises how much Abrams and his generation are truly the children of Spielberg and Lucas as they explain how movies such as Raiders of the Lost Ark, Star Wars and so on?
A monster named Susan isn't very scary — the irradiated Susan is now 50 feet tall and superstrong — so she gets a scary new name... which is as much as bit of crafty commentary on marketing as it is merely ridiculous on its face.
There may be as much pomp and circumstance here as anywhere (deservedly so, I suppose), but you still get the traditional vows, hymns (led by two choirs, an orchestra, and a fanfare ensemble), and readings of Scripture, all of which leave little room or need for commentary.
We get the setup to the climactic Big Fight, and of course, we get the payoff to that setup in an extended, brutal bout that has much more at stake than the outcome of the fight (It's so effective that even the annoying, on - the - nose commentary becomes background noise).
On one hand, the audio commentary with director / star George Clooney and producer Grant Heslov is so dry and uninteresting that not even the addition of a visual commentary helps much.
Blu - ray Highlight: There's some really good supplemental material on the disc — like audio commentaries with the movie's producers, consultants and composer Cliff Martinez, as well as demonstrations on film processing, editing and dialogue editing — but Soderberg and writer Stephen Gaghan's commentary track is jam - packed with so much great information about making the movie that you'll definitely want to start there.
We've become so inundated with this sub-genre of mainstream cinema at this point in time that I won't dispense with much commentary on this one.
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