Sentences with phrase «without named characters»

There also is an odd feel to the make - up of the city itself, nondescript, with an intentional microcosm of different nationalities, races, genders and accents (It is claimed that author Saramago had the producers agree the story not be set in any recognizable city and without named characters, like the novel).

Not exact matches

안녕하세요 ~ My favorite holiday character is Ms Claus (Santa Claus wife, don't know the English name for her) because come on, everyone knows that without her, Santa Claus would have been way too stressed and tired.
Create your character at the beggining, by naming him Adult Games; Adult Toons; Dating Sims; Dress - Up Games + Dress - Up Dolls; Dynasty Lovers Dating Sim: Fantasy, RPG, super sexy dating sim without hentai!
Those who have somehow never seen a single movie will be partially under a Confundus Charm without a scorecard to track all the characters, connections and lore that lead us to the ultimate showdown between the bespectacled boy wizard and the pure evil of He Who Must Not Be Named.
For her part, Ronan laughs at the idea she got through the whole shoot without questioning why her character had the name Lady Bird (but click on the video above for our conversation and you will see Gerwig explain it).
In one scene, there is a character named Izzy (Page, To Rome with Love) who tries to bring down someone close to her whose company is involved in a major pollution scandal, but these moments don't ring as profound without anything to ground her character, and the way that this story thread evolves feels manufactured, which is evidenced by the lack of genuine emotion when the episode concludes in a traumatic way.
Like any other veteran character actor he had long since got used to being the face and voice that people marked immediately without being able to attach a name.
Though an entire subplot devoted to homosexuals in a film like this is usually cause for trepidation, American Wedding distinguishes itself with a refreshing affection for its gay characters — enough so that a few same - sex smooches are shown without irony, a same - sex dance is left uncommented - upon at the reception of the wedding in question, and a gay character named Bear (Eric Allan Kramer) is allowed to be a key figure in two set - piece gags.
Jolie plays Christine Collins, a character based on a real - life woman of the same name whose nine - year - old son, Walter Collins, went missing without explanation in 1928.
• It's worth noting that the name of Walsh's character, Visser, is never mentioned in the movie, likely in homage to Dashiell Hammett's Continental Op, who is at one point described, like Visser, as «a monster... without any human foolishness like love in him.»
Characters are introduced, often without names, and when we meet up with them in their own past, the actors look nothing like their older selves.
The idea of students trapped in an auditorium after dark and chased by vengeful spirits isn't without promise, but rookie directors Travis Cluff and Chris Lofing show no facility for the kind of plausibly claustrophobic camera setups that make Paranormal Activity (or its sequels) so visually compelling; it also doesn't help that their cast of fresh - faced young actors (all playing characters under their real names) never quite inhabit the supposedly pants - wetting terror of their situation.
If you're making a Tarantino-esque chamber piece, I should be able to name at least one character after seeing your film without checking IMDB.
It's a film that cuts both ways, with such gags as a character named Thick Kevin (Brooke), who always interjects the daftest comments in the middle of conversations, can either be seen as cheeky and hilarious, or half - hearted attempts to interject comedy without regard for the integrity of the characters or their stories.
Pirate Radio is neither historically accurate enough (it can't even stick to its year of 1966 to provide its tunes, some of which came out a little after («Jumpin» Jack Flash» is from 1968, as is «So Long, Marianne» by Leonard Cohen, to name but two) to provide interest in a bit of pop culture history, nor is it consistent enough to sustain its good cheer without collapsing from the weight of its own cutesy manipulations in its characters for laughs, It's not so much a story as it is a collection of sitcom moments meant to induce laughter and mirth, mixing it with all of the best rock tunes of its era.
That's also without mentioning most of the Decepticons from the previous movies, other Autobots from the previous movies, new Autobots like Hot Rod, Sqweeks, and a odd butler character named Cogman, or the new Decepticons who are introduced and removed so quickly it's practically like they aren't in the movie at all.
Clooney's character does ride into town without a name but this movie could just as easily be about a Belgian assassin as an American one.
Much of the humor, and many of the interactions, feel as though they have been ad - libbed, especially in Peter's consistent use of made up words and pet names («Dude Von Dudenstein»), which fits in with the character's attempt to seem cool without exactly knowing how to do it.
It's too smart for its own good, presenting a superhero origin story without allowing any of its characters to ever once even whisper the word (a lot like «The Walking Dead» making everyone look like assholes by avoiding the term «zombie») and spending too much time letting its teen titans drop names like Schopenhauer before making it clear that the character who most embraces the philosopher's theories of aesthetics and self - abnegation ultimately takes up the mantle of one of Schopenhauer's offshoots, Nietzsche.
Call Me By Your Name and Professor Marston and the Wonder Women were among the Outstanding Film — Wide Release nominees and in the television section, along with Outstanding Comedy and Drama Series nominees for shows that contain regular LGBTQ characters, GLAAD also recognizes shows without a recurring LGBTQ character but had an LGBTQ - inclusive episode such as Room 104 and Legion.
But if they are trying to grab rights to the setting — unless it is so unique that it could never be used in another story without it being clear you'd just ripped it from that shared universe — or characters / character names, run from that contract as quickly as possible.
When a book is part of a series, you have to make sure you don't change canon, without good cause, and that your characters are all called the same name and look the same from book to book.
we can start writing without being dead certain what we want to write, where we want to start or even what the characters names are.
In truth, there are too many characters to name without filling up an entire post or two here on our site due to how huge the series has gotten and how many characters there are to keep track of.
What is sad is that it's so unnecessary: Harry Potter fans would need little encouragement to spend a few quid here and there on clothes or wands to customise their characters, and there are countless examples of free - to - play games that offer players the option to spend money without ruining the experience (Fortnite, Pokémon Go and Dandy Dungeon, to name three).
Back in those days, developers said you would be able to interact with every object in a 3d enviroment, search every drawer or closet, pick up anything and use anyway you want... this mechanic is what make the original idea for Sadness compeling, not its name, story, characters... without this gameplay mechanic, this game will not be what people were expecting from the original game, no matter what its called.
There's also Free Mode, which allows you to replay old missions without the restraint of using specific characters, and Survival Mode, which as the name suggests, sets you loose against hordes of enemies to see how long you can survive, both in standard flavor and in challenge - based trials.
The firm name and location take 37 characters, and that's without certain things like «LLP.»
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