Sentences with phrase «with cynical eyes»

Maybe Puel too could be exploited by companies with cynical eyes, such as Sun Bets.
The movie has been assembled with a cynical eye toward the Sex and the City crowd: female friendship, weddings, fashion, and a blatant lack of concern about real - life issues like bankrolling this sort of ceremony.
Watch «Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit» with a cynical eye, and you'll glimpse evidence that studio confidence might have waned.

Not exact matches

The personalized and «humanized» stories — where we learned that Mitt helped out individuals with children who died and were sick and all that sort of stuff — was enough, despite my cynical resistance, to elicit a moist and salty discharge from the tear ducts near my eyes.
It's alright for you to be so cynical with proof, but a theory and discredit the proof of God's existence even in the things you can see with your eye.
A jaded and cynical person such as myself will see the faraway look in our chief's eyes, the clenched fist held against their chest, and merely respond with an exasperated eyeroll, muttering, «He's going all Jim Hacker again».
Instead of feeling like a cynical, desperate imitation, directors Bobby and Peter Farrelly (co-writing with frequent collaborator Mike Cerrone) make an affectionate homage that plucks these»30s - era eye - pokers into the age of the iPhone and Twitter.
But that's cynicism, and there's nothing cynical about this gorgeously crafted, perilous journey with three heroes who've grown up before our eyes over the last decade, iconically repelling evil with the support of a miraculous, focused production team.
A Most Violent Year (J.C. Chandor, 2014) Chandor is fast becoming a fascinating blend of classicist with a cynical postmodern eye.
When: November 4th Why: When I first heard that Ben Stiller and Eddie Murphy were teaming up with director Brett Ratner for what can be best described as a blue - collar «Ocean's 11,» I responded accordingly, with a witty comment and a cynical roll of the eyes.
The opening sets us firmly in the Thatcher era, with college student Mark Renton joining a union protest, thinking he'll score some street cred; in the bloody melee that follows, he acquires both a cynical eye and a nagging back complaint.
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