It's a minor spoiler to say but everyone pretty much gets
some sort of happy ending in the end.
Not exact matches
At first sight, beings and their destinies might seem to us to be scattered haphazard or at least in an arbitrary fashion over the face
of the earth; we could very easily suppose that each
of us might equally well have been born earlier or later, at this place or that,
happier or more ill - starred, as though the universe from the beginning to
end of its history formed in space - time a
sort of vast flower - bed in which the flowers could be changed about at the whim
of the gardener.
Whereas A
Sort of Life is content to report, «I married and I was
happy,» the biographer tells the extraordinary story
of courtship, wedding and early marriage, as well as suggesting what would undo that union in the
end.
The Frenchman does not seem too bothered about any perceived lack
of quality in the squad, as he said before the
end of the season that he was
happy with what he has got, and would only sign players if they became available and were the right
sort to fit into our squad.
So, as in Casablanca, this story does have a
happy ending of sorts: like Rick, we can do the right thing in the
end, despite all the cynical talk about self - interest.
Although I'm one who tends to look on the bright side
of things, I'm
sort of happy to see the back
end of 2016.
Former electrical This is a story in two parts, without a
happy ending, or indeed an
ending of any
sort.
As one
of the film's subjects points out, there is no
happy ending to all this, even when a resolution
of some
sort appears to occur.
Too many romantic comedies witlessly hone in on the differences between men and women to create a heightened - stakes backdrop in which every interaction with the opposite sex is imbued with some
sort of grand, gender - statement significance, which is
of course then supposed to be neatly resolved and tidily put away by the time a paired - off
happy ending rolls around.
This sequel -
of -
sorts provides us with a kid - friendly imagining
of the conflict between Sherlock Holmes and Professor Moriarty, once again starring lawn ornaments, casting a plastic corporate mascot as the villain, and, as you probably have guessed, also featuring a
happy ending.
Happy End works best as a
sort of Haneke Greatest Hits package, recycling and updating multiple themes and concerns from his previous films, in a way that seems deliberately designed to play to his fans.
It amounts to
sort of a romanic comedy, although it makes no promises
of providing a
happy ending.
Bests Twin Peaks: The Return (Showtime, David Lynch, 2017) Jackie (Pablo Larrain, 2016) 20th Century Women (Mike Mills, 2016) The Lost City
of Z (James Gray, 2016) Acqua e Zucchero: Carlo Di Palma, i colori della vita (Water and Sugar: Carlo Di Palma, The Color
of Life, Fariborz Kamkari, 2016) Columbus (Kogonada, 2017) Una Especie de Familia (A
Sort of Family, Diego Lerman, 2017) Jusqu» à la Garde (Custody, Xavier Legrand, 2017) Blade Runner: 2049 (Denis Villeneuve, 2017) Get Out (Jordan Peele, 2017)
Happy End (Michael Haneke, 2017) The Killing
of a Sacred Deer (Yorgos Lanthimos, 2017)
The
ending of this film is perhaps the biggest botch - up job, as if they had no idea how to tie it up, except to give us half - baked conspiracy notions, and unlike the Lemony Snicket books, an attempt at a
happy ending, which
sort of goes against the premise
of these children never really finding happiness.
An American remake sounded like a suicide mission, the
sort of wrong - headed thinking that allowed the superb and uncompromising Dutch thriller The Vanishing to be remade as a dim - witted Yankee property, complete with a tacked - on
happy ending.
Yet there is no mistaking Amour for anything other than a great love story, and one
of a
sort rarely seen in movies — a portrait
of two people at the
end of a long, not always
happy, but profound relationship, who find themselves tested by the words
of that eternal promise: «till death do us part.»
Along the way, they both are enveloped in some
sort of electromagnetic storm and Leo
ends up crashing on the planet, only to find that it's not only inhabited, but there's quite a bit
of English - speaking apes who are none too
happy to encounter another human, and a trouble - making one at that.
Of course this WAS just sort of a reminder that these sort of shenanigans can happen with any game at any time, and they won't all have happy ending
Of course this WAS just
sort of a reminder that these sort of shenanigans can happen with any game at any time, and they won't all have happy ending
of a reminder that these
sort of shenanigans can happen with any game at any time, and they won't all have happy ending
of shenanigans can happen with any game at any time, and they won't all have
happy endings.
Thursday's showcase film is director Michael Haneke's
sort -
of «sequel» to «Amour», «
Happy End», with Jean - Louis Trintignant and «Elle» Oscar nominee Isabelle Huppert.
I really value that protected space
of the
happy - ever - after
ending, and that
sort of writing.
She, too has been living in a fairy - tale world
of sorts, but so far she has not experienced any
happy endings.
This series is a typical bitter - sweet romance that has a
happy ending of sorts, but the kind that Western readers are used to.
You'll find you're basically printing Hilton points, which, unless you have some
sort of massive aversion to Hilton hotels (or need to stay at their highest
end hotels, which require an absurd number
of points) you'll be
happy you have.
Being somewhat limited in my freedom to be entertained as a kid, for many years
of my life, gaming served as a diverse means
of escape for me away from the trappings
of a mostly mundane, repetitive life, at the
end of the school day I would often think to myself «alright... so what are some
of the good things that I have to look forward to when I get home...», one
of the first things that I would do as soon as I got home after school was play FINAL FANTASY on PlayStation, I would eagerly walk home as quickly as I could just so that I could continue playing from the part where I had last left off the day before, as pathetic as this may come across, I can confidently say that many
of the
happiest moments that I have had in my life have been while being utterly enthralled by the developments in the games, I think that reminiscing about aspects
of a video game with great fondness is a hallmark
of an impactful form
of entertainment, I would often be so «in the zone» while playing that anything aside from what was taking place on the screen would become completely null and void in my mind to the point where I forget that I was playing a video game, even though I did not live the events
of the game, I can emphatise with them as if I had, that is the
sort of impact that the emotional depth
of the story, the characters, the music, the design and the overall world
of the series have had on me, what appeals the most to me is that FINAL FANTASY allows us the luxury
of divorcing ourselves
of our current reality to assume that
of a world
of fantasy for a precious moment in time, which is a sentiment that makes me wish that our world as whole had a little more «FINAL FANTASY» within it so as to make us all want to wake up as soon as possible to enjoy another day
The «
happy end» came in 2016, when the former silk mill has been converted into a
sort of creative factory, which houses art ateliers and exhibition spaces.
«Someone that seems very self - involved and center
of an approach (and that
sort of thing) is really... they're not going to fit into a culture that
ends up making you
happy because it's a «we» culture instead
of an «I» culture,» Baiynd explained.