The point made here is that if one cherry - picks a small subset of the data, one can make just about any claim
with a nice plot to back it up.
Nobody's Fault and my latest one, What It Takes, are straightforward family dramas
with nice plot twists.....
Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth is a great JRPG
with a nice plot, an enjoyable, old school turn - based battle system, beautiful art direction and a design that grants you the opportunity to catch many Digimons.
Not exact matches
Nice article... I used to be one of those staunch Wenger fans through the years... I used to believe he is superior than Sir Alex, because
with almost nothing to spend and playing
with kids, he managed to keep us up there every year... I was really caught up
with that half season wonder we used to show... In the summer 2013, him or the board (I don't recall) came out and said we are much stable financially and now we can fight
with the biggest bullies, I got my hopes high, I thought we are definitely signing a top striker and DM, that what we need... What happened, only hours before the window closed we managed to sign a top AMF (remember we have our best player for the season 2012 - 2013 was AMF, Cazorla if you remember), I was really depressed seen Giroud leading the line every match... then comes winter window, and we were right there top of the table... My friend send me a poster of an elephant on a tree, and on the bottom of it «no one knows how it got there but everybody knows how it will get down»... I told my friend that we are only one decent striker far from the gold... and what happened, we signed an old injured DM on loan... That for me was a completely arrogance and stubbornness cost us the league title... There I completely lost the
plot with Wenger... I wish yesterday I was
with those who raised that banner... I would write in my banner «Enough talks and philosophy, we need results»
Eventually it is a true feel - good movie
with a
nice but somewhat cliché
plot.
Though it does have its moments and a
nice, creepy atmosphere, it seems more like a movie made for TV,
with cheap production values, a lot of annoying clichés and a derivative
plot that brings to mind a thousand better horror films that you could be watching instead.
Actually quite a bloody film
with some
nice gore,
plot is old and you can see the «Alien» rip (which would of influenced allot at the time) a mile off.
Despite the
plot contrivances, both Rubin and Stern do a very
nice job in their dialogue, especially in the actual language people use when communicating
with each other through text and instant messages.
The
Nice Guys is a prototypical Shane Black film, saturated
with all his earmarks as a filmmaker: Southern California, Christmas, private detectives, slapstick violence, explosions, people falling off of things, and a loosey - goosey
plot that won't really hold up if you look too hard at it.
This,
with variations, is a tried - and - true
plot device, but juxtaposing Sidney's disorientation
with her new vision and the things for which normally sighted people have no frame of reference is a
nice twist.
It would have been
nice if Yash Chopra, the Indian cinemas» most important and influential director, had ended his career
with another flawless masterpiece, but the last third of Jab Tak Hai Jaan (2012) gets bogged down in the
plot mechanics it was so blithely ignoring.
Akiba's Beat is an enjoyable RPG
with an interesting
plot and some
nice characters; the only problem is that it also comes
with cheap presentation and repetitive gameplay.
Great cinematography, great CG, incredible art direction and sets, good music and sound FX,
nice plot with some twists, good performances.
Nice review man, but I got ta say this movie just doesn't interest me
with it's story and
plot so I might just take a pass on this on.
There's a
nice late - breaking
plot twist (at least somebody gets away
with something), but by then the film has run out of gas.
It would've been a bummer if the solid participants accidentally let a spoiler slip, particularly after the
nice lengths Marvel Studios and the Russo Brothers went to
with a purpose to stay the
plot main points of Avengers: Infinity War tightly underneath wraps.
Through a cohesive «Blues Brothers» - style
plot that's divided into three episodes and in and out at 90 minutes, «More Orphan Than Not,» «Bananas Split,» and «No Moe Mister
Nice» each begin
with the clownish song to any one of the real stooges» TV shorts.
The Brothers Bloom is an odd, somewhat distancing, but still curiously satisfying confection that may not leave the indelible impression in the mind that Brick does, but, thanks to the brilliant performances, literary presentation, and kitschy European art design, offers a
nice bit of escapism into its uniquely quirky world, not dissimilar to the way Wes Anderson might do if he were to create a film
with more of a conventional
plot (Anderson's Bottle Rocket perhaps comes closest to the spirit of Johnson's film from a story standpoint).
There's a
nice sense of messiness in the
plot of this rather silly film, but it's directed
with so much sun - drenched perfection that everything feels fake.
Because the sequence is so good — and because Loy and Powell do have a
nice scene dealing
with the romance
plot following it — as the film plays, it isn't clear how much time Loy's been off - screen.
The
plot (or as much as can be revealed here
with a massive spoiler spill) is thus: A group of five college kids — Curt the jock (Chris Hemsworth, pre-Thor), his girlfriend Jules (Anna Hutchinson), stoner Marty (Fran Kranz), good girl Dana (Kristen Connolly), and brainy
nice guy Holden (Jesse Williams), head out to an isolated cabin in the woods for a
nice weekend's debauch.
With a tone that never settles into a defined groove, It Could Happen to You doesn't come together, offering only a handful of
nice moments amid a framework of hard - to - swallow
plot machinations.
The
plot is obviously designed for the audience to sympathize
with the innocent Jimmy (Jake Gyllenhaal), who ventures into the outside world for the first time to make a cross-country trek to stop the wedding of the
nice girl (Marley Shelton) he loves.
«Perry does a
nice job
with some
plot twists, even if most readers will quickly discount the heir to the throne of England as a viable suspect.»
So I agree
with you, for the authors they need to think about selling the book,
with pretty covers and a
nice price, because I don't buy indie books over 3.99 and only if it's a really great
plot.
«Delinsky nails it in her trademark latest, a captivating and moving story about a woman who's had enough of her life and wants a fresh start... [She] keeps the story moving
with some
nice twists on a familiar
plot, rich characterizations, and real - feeling dilemmas that will keep readers hooked.»
I miss coming across random space stations on barren rocks
with unusual side missions, it'd be
nice to have more of those
with elaborate
plots that might lead you across the galaxy.
Their presence isn't too intricate to the
plot, but it's
nice to see them once again interacting
with all the other characters from the show.
But
with a sequel, we could be seeing something else —
with a new
plot, the protagonists don't necessarily need to be constantly moving forward, so maybe we'll be seeing something more in the vein of Final Fantasy X. I actually liked most of the characters in XIII, so it would be really
nice to play a game
with them in that I actually enjoyed.
The main campaign is divided into three Acts, each coming
with a
nice change of scenery and a questionable change in
plot.
Tetris never had a
plot, we don't argue
with Mario Kart «s lack of context, so it doesn't detract from the overall experience of the game — it just would have been
nice.
It then goes into predictable and generic
plot territory
with each new chapter starting out like you need to go investigate this then meeting up
with a new partner and doing the mission which ends
with you finding the terrorist who runs off and leaves a
nice boss for you to fight.
It shocked us
with a heartfelt
plot wrapped around a brutal world full of creeps, weirdos, and one genuinely
nice guy.
While it's always
nice to have a good
plot to go
with good gameplay, it's usually a combination of awful aspects that bog down a game to the point where even its best feature isn't enough to save it.
Tales of Zestiria's story is a little simpler than those of past games, but there's nothing inherently wrong
with that; in a way, this is a
nice return to basics that eschews
plot complexity in favor of greater character development.
's story is a little simpler than those of past games, but there's nothing inherently wrong
with that; in a way, this is a
nice return to basics that eschews
plot complexity in favor of greater character development.
Excellent
plot which shows Issac's struggle against the Necromorph and himself, Visuals are sharp and crisp along
with a soundtrack that will literally make you jump on your seat, Spooky atmosphere that the series is known for is better than ever, Weapons / Suit upgrade are still a blast, Free movement in zero gravity is a welcome change, Multiplayer is a
nice addition.
The Story Mode may feature a
plot that's simple and ultimately unimportant, but at least it provides a
nice amount of battles
with varied win conditions.
Sorry for being a bit data - technical, and it would remain a bit of the problem to have
nice convincing
plots with data..
In 1896, noting that moonlight had to pass through more atmosphere when the Moon was lower in the sky (a
nice paradox to entertain grade schoolers
with), Swedish Nobelist Svante Arrhenius used the recently invented Langley bolometer to
plot IR from the Moon as a function of its altitude.
Customers ask it (or do it themselves), because they do not have better tools at hand, and, even if the garbage if far from reality, it can be useful: it produce very
nice, animated color
plots with a very serious - looking FE mesh that can help an engineering department sell a project to management better (don't panic, they are not insane, they know they misused the model and usually have an experimental curve to back them up, at least if it is a production project; — RRB --RRB-
The Story Mode may feature a
plot that's simple and ultimately unimportant, but at least it provides a
nice amount of battles
with varied win conditions.