"Sublime moments" refers to experiences or moments that are awe-inspiring, extraordinary, and filled with beauty, often leaving a lasting impression on us.
Full definition
Ozil was in fine form and produced a few
sublime moments of magic to show that he really is in full flow right now.
The final kiss and the whispered secret could be perceived as the ultimate
Gothic sublime moment — too large, too fluid, intangible and indefinable.
My play style is far less graceful, and I'm often just fumbling my way from one fight to the next, each encounter spiralling out of control, but leading to the
occasional sublime moment of faux skill.
I enjoyed many peaceful and
sublime moments on the prairie this year, but one of the most fascinating events I witnessed was when Tiffany, my nephews» Limousin heifer, gave birth to a bull calf, which we named «Wally» (pictured above in my north pasture, just minutes after he was born).
The sublime moment of the release of a black superhero film rich in black artistic talent has become a license for outward displays of black brilliance and black beauty.
Those sublime moments of skill will linger long after they have occurred, which must make watching the current Watford side somewhat painful.
Boe has developed a very intriguing premise, but there is no follow through; and though Beast enjoys
some sublime moments of shocking craziness, the plot often becomes frustratingly predictable.
And these scenes feed into
the sublime moments of tenderness that attests to the film's ultimate triumph.
He writes of the «
sublime moment» which describes a confrontation with a concept too large to classify, too fluid to be contained, too intangible to be fully understood, an experience that inspires passion, dilates the pupils and expands the imagination.
In Lost in Translation
the sublime moment becomes eroticised.
What does Bob Harris (Bill Murray) whisper into Charlotte's (Scarlett Johansson) ear in
that sublime moment when he «walks back to her» on a crowded Tokyo street at the end of Lost in Translation (Sofia Coppola, 2003)?
It's at this narrative turning point that First Reformed truly becomes a Paul Schrader film, one involving, among other things, an astonishing otherworldly vision — occasioned by
a sublime moment in which Seyfried's hair topples gently over the side of her face — and a secretly constructed suicide vest that's treated throughout like Chekov's unfired gun.
There are, to be sure,
some sublime moments in the early going, and some marvelous sentences throughout the book: «All the scenes that never occur, but wait in the wings of possibility.»
Everything else fell away when I was in front of that piece —
a sublime moment.