Sentences with phrase «walk out of the film»

Walking out of this film, the biggest positive I find myself commending this film on, is its cast and their interaction with one another.
Never have I wanted to walk out of a film more than this one.
The viewer subsequently can't help but walk out of the film with a much higher opinion of the notoriously incompetent commander - in - chief, as Bush is ultimately portrayed as a likeable good ol' boy whose presidency seems to stem primarily from his desire to please his father.
Scores of Cannes filmgoers allegedly walked out of the film in protest — but von Trier's latest really isn't all that shocking.
And the ending — if only it were a statement of disgusted protest to walk out of a film once it's over.
But I don't really believe in walking out of films, so I hold tight, uncomfortably at first, and my reservations slowly dissolve.
When you walk out of the film, it is easy to immediately ask what the point of the whole thing was.
There s no reason to walk out of a film like Old School angry.
Saw a fan screening on Tuesday, and if it wasn't for Jeff Goldblum, I would've walked out of the film.

Not exact matches

You can walk out of a cinema if you're not enjoying a film.
Walking out of the theater, my friend in the screening immediately declared that the film was the most tone - deaf film he has seen this year.
The sense of being outside of time did not change when they departed two days early from school, when they spent three hours on the bus to Eugene staring out the window with their Walkman headphones on, when they wandered through the swirly paisley carpeted hotel hallways, or went in street clothes to have a walk around Autzen Stadium, where a sex scene in Animal House was filmed.
i prefer not to talk about myself but here goes... i am 175 cm with blond hair and ive studied architecture.i like taking long walks because i like natures surroundings, i adore animals, going to the beach (summer of course hanging out with friends watching films and reading books about philosophy and phsycology.
iam out going love beech walking going to pubs like watching films and enjoy the outside i have a great sense of humour and loves a gd laugh
I'm an honest woman, loving and looking for a man of good feeling that you like to enjoy all the pleasures of this life, I need to find my soulmate in this way, I love cooking, walking, reading, listening to music and watch films, also love dancing, dining out and shopping also.
hey im darren im very loving caring genuine fun honest kind nice decent down to earth independant trustworthy outgoing friendy respectful adventurous spontaneous with a gsoh also romantic i like making music like most types of films and music like swimming walking camping going out having fun...
Rodriguez just pulls stuff out of his subconscious, all these great ideas he's had forever and here's the one film he can finally put all of them into — the giant robots invading the empty Sunday - morning streets of downtown Austin and Grandpa walking on the moon and Alan Cumming instructing little kids on how to use 3 - D glasses and pseudo-mystic video - game lore and — dear god — Sylvester Stallone as a hippie.
As the film opens, Ron is in the midst of great personal and professional humiliation, having been passed over for a cushy network position in favour of his wife Veronica (a returning and game Christina Applegate); his response is to walk out on her and their seven - year - old son, taking a job as an announcer at Sea World (where he drinks heavily and insults the dolphins).
Walking Out is a very unremarkable film and while certainly not bad has the feel of a made for TV movie.
tape the paper to your tv and haver the most annoying person in the world read the script you banged on ur keyboard and u have an Oscar worthy film if an Oscar judge just walked out of disaster movie.
The film begins as Billy is walked out the front gate of Missouri's Jefferson City prison and put on a train to St. Louis.
Fortunately the action is handled in a much more controlled way than the second film with the viewer actually being able to walk out of the cinema without a coma.
If you placed a few hundred random people into a movie theatre and asked them to invest their time in this film, I can guarantee that at least 50 percent would either walk out or despise their experience, but that's okay because not everyone likes every single piece of art.
Under The Skin is very much a film critic movie; while it has an oblique nature that provides a barrier to entry for the general public (six walk outs in the first 40 minutes of my screening, all people presumably brought in by the promise of Scarlett Johansson naked.
Filmed without narration, subtitles, or any comprehensible dialogue, Babies is a direct encounter with four babies who stumble their predictable ways to participating in the awesome beauty of life.Needless to say, their experience of the first year of life is vastly different, yet what stands out is not how much is different but how much is universal as each in their own way attempts to conquer their physical environment.Though the language is different as well as the environment, the babies cry the same, laugh the same, and try to learn the frustrating, yet satisfying art of crawling, then walking in the same way.You will either find Babies entrancing or slow moving depending on your attitude towards babies because frankly that's all there is, yet for all it will be an immediate experience far removed from the world of cell phones and texting, exploring up close and personal the mystery of life as the individual personality of each child begins to emerge.
The Help's director has recruited some of the cast from that film to assist in telling this story, with Viola Davis as Brown's negligent mother, who walked out on the family when he was young, only to show up again when he becomes well known, and Octavia Spencer as his aunt, who helps care for him.
Others, meanwhile, may walk away feeling as indifferent to the craft of landscaping as they were when they came in — a crippling Achilles» heel in a film whose chief concern is the transmission of out - of - fashion knowledge to new generations.
And finally here come the supplementary complaints: Kate Beckinsale (Underworld: Evolution) looks ridiculous in this film, not only as the spineless wife of an annoying slob, but because she's completely unbelievable as the oh so clichéd stay at home mum who looks like she's just walked out of a hairdresser's at any given moment.
They claim he's staying at the hotel the cast of the Guardians cast is using in Atlanta, walking out with the film's script, and even using a car usually reserved for star Chris Pratt.
The once - terrifying creatures have now become as stale a horror sub-genre as zombies, with numerous films and television shows being churned out one after another, meaning it takes something truly phenomenal like The Walking Dead to emerge from the growing puddle of tedium.
Reviews from Sundance of three films that directly involve our relationship with nature, including «Chasing Coral,» «I Dream in Another Language» and «Walking Out
Supporting actors, including Oscar winners Lupita Nyong» o (12 Years a Slave) and Forrest Whitaker (The Last King of Scotland), Oscar nominees Angela Bassett (What's Love Got to Do with It) and Daniel Kayuula (Get Out), heavy - hitters Danai Gurira (TV's The Walking Dead) and Sterling K. Brown (TV's This is Us), and scene - stealing Letitia Wright (Steven Spielberg's upcoming Ready Player One), round out the film's impressive lineOut), heavy - hitters Danai Gurira (TV's The Walking Dead) and Sterling K. Brown (TV's This is Us), and scene - stealing Letitia Wright (Steven Spielberg's upcoming Ready Player One), round out the film's impressive lineout the film's impressive lineup.
Frances McDormand (Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day, Friends with Money), as the ultra-feisty National Security director, gets to storm in and out of vehicles and walk fast and determined with her entourage of government agents, but her only significance to the film is she is the only female in the series to not look like she has jumped out of a Victoria's Secret catalog (the charisma-less Rosie Huntington - Whitely gets most of the cheesecake shots, replacing the equally vapid crackpot, Megan Fox).
Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk (Ang Lee, 2016) 1 1/2 stars out of 4 Ang Lee has made many fine films, some of them great.
I thought the second movie was a great visual effects film if you wanted to see robots beating the crap out of each other, but overall it was so poorly executed that I actually wanted to walk out of the theater and I almost did.
Tarantino's «Death Proof» is up next, and while the first half of the film is so boring it might cause some people to walk out early, it's well worth it to stick around for the adrenaline - pumping finale.
And I have never walked out of a movie, not in my ten - year career as a film critic, not before.
Some of my best friends and I were sitting around and we hatched an idea to drive around the U.S. for three months interviewing kids from all walks of life to figure out what our generation is about [which became the film Our Time (2009)-RSB-.
The Golden Globes, which were handed out last weekend, are the only major awards to make a distinction between drama and «musical or comedy», and Martin McDonagh's new film, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, duly walked away with four of the coveted awards, including Best Motion Picture.
Reminding myself of the film's best asset kept me from walking out.
1 and 2 (Netflix, Feb. 1) and Kathryn Bigelow's The Hurt Locker (Netflix and Hulu, Feb. 1), though of the films that came out yesterday, we're most jazzed about Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story (Netflix, Feb. 1), the deeply underrated John C. Reilly vehicle that parodied the musician biopic — which has some great songs, too.
Richard III's period cultural roots are rather cleverly laid out throughout the film, with Lady Anne's (Kristen Scott Thomas) first appearance on the screen evocative of the grand dames of the silver screen, like an Ingrid Bergman or Marlene Dietrich: a dark coat and a fur draped around her, a hat partially obscuring her face, and the morgue she walks through smoky and opaque.
And if you think it's only the well to do who shell out upwards of $ 3,000 for hair weaves, you'd better prepare yourself because there are working women all over the US and Canada (as I'm sure there are in other places though the film focuses mainly on the US) walking around with hair that cost more than some cars.
And maybe it was her resemblance to Kirsten Dunst, or the flush of first love, or Cameron Crowe «s undeniable feel for bittersweet romance, which survives even in that film, but I came out of the picture walking on air.
There are walking tours of the city devoted to the film, showcasing sites like Thrift Town, or the big blue house that serves as Lady Bird's dream home, and the city's tourism board have called the film «a little gem that drops out of the sky.»
I predict that the audience members who see the film a second time will outnumber the moviegoers who walk out of the theater in disgust, but not by much.
Following a single father who works as a human billboard in Taipei, and his left - to - their - own - devices kids, with the presence of their mother represented by three different actresses, the film has the barest thread of story (Tsai has admitted that he no longer has any real interest in narrative), and seems determined to provoke less patient audience members into walking out, with a series of shots that last upwards of ten minutes without all that much movement in them.
I walked out amazed, perplexed, and overjoyed that I saw one of the deservedly most - talked - about and creatively inquisitive films at Cannes.
The series was well out front of the zombie craze that preceded The Walking Dead and WWZ, and it became one of the rare action film franchises anchored by an actress.
I would have been so much more satisfied walking out of the screening had the film been about 40 - year - olds and their struggles with deciding what it means to be that age and if they need kids to be happy.
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