Sentences with phrase «which exact scene»

Not exact matches

If by God's «glory» we understand a majestic court scene in which God is seated upon a great throne, lording it over the creation and gloating in his divine magnificence, then the phrase suggests ideas that are the exact opposite of the «Galilean vision» of the Love which is self - giving, gladly receptive, utterly ungrudging in generous openness to all that occurs in the created order.
I can pinpoint the exact moment in which my opinion of the movie changed, but so as not to spoil what is genuinely one of the strangest scenes in a blockbuster in recent memory, let me just say that once Pacific Rim Uprising really starts drinking its own Kool - Aid, it's an absolute joy.
In Red Sparrow's best scene, Dominika is asked to give the classmate who tried to rape her the day before exactly «what he wants,» at which point she proceeds to do the exact opposite.
When a 13 - year - old girl vanishes on a summer night in the German countryside, the crime scene is manufactured to look identical to one that took place in the exact same location 23 years ago in which the missing girl was eventually found dead.
Which is why this video of three men playing the same exact scene in different films versions of the Hannibal Lecter novel «Red Dragon» is so fascinating.
Instead of being outside the scene and looking in, as we are in a genre picture like Gustave Caillebotte's «The Floor Planers» (1875), we are literally brought inside the space — a condition even more precisely articulated by Plimack - Magold's «Two Exact Rules on a Dark and Light Floor» (1975), where our physical presence is acknowledged by the position of the rulers, which suggests that we might be checking whether the tiles are correctly aligned.
This psychological dramaticism is reiterated through sharp and exacting image crops, which force the viewer into a condensed and eerie narrative showing no evidence of who or what might occupy the space outside these scenes he presents.
However, little of his work is strictly Pre-Raphaelite in the sense in which Hunt and Millais understood the term, and only in three pictures did he attempt the exact and literal representation of a scene which the Pre-Raphaelite creed demanded.
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