Word: caribbeans
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Between these occasions, Superman Returned, bearing the weight of a Christological message - this was a second coming - but more moony than passionate in his pursuit of Lois Lane; Johnny Depp was back as Captain Jack Sparrow, in Part Two of Pirates of the Caribbean but he was more than ever mysteriously immune to the charms of Kiera Knightley, his presence too often buried under the weight of witless special effects; and, of course, there was Snakes on a Plane, which more or less definitively proved that Internet buzz is not necessarily a reliable selling tool for a movie...
Think of it this way: you’ve watched countless hours of swordplay before. The only real difference between the 'Pirates of the Caribbean 2' and this critical championship weekend is that the latter will seem one heck of a lot shorter...
...office six years in a row. Jim Carrey can be huge in the right project. Will Ferrell has become a major deliverer. Talladega Nights, if it keeps on motoring at its turbo pace, could end up one of the top five grossers of the year (after Pirates of the Caribbean 2, Cars, X-Men III and The Da Vinci Code); and it was made for less than half the cost of any of those films...
...combine the luxury of a cruise with the spirit of a mission, there's the Cruise with a Cause, offered by Christian Travel Finder. Joan Tidwell, 53, took her daughter Lindsay, 18, on the voyage as a high school graduation gift. Mother and daughter, who are Baptists, boarded Royal Caribbean's Sovereign of the Seas for a five-day voyage and enjoyed cruise-ship amenities, concerts by such contemporary Christian artists as Todd Agnew and New Song at night, a day of missionary work in Freeport, Bahamas, and a day of snorkeling, sunbathing and swimming on CocoCay. "There were about...
...remains still at the "critical" threat level. Airport services are slowly returning to normal - though restrictions on hand luggage remain in place - and the government is trying to get back to business as usual under a storm of public criticism. With Prime Minister Tony Blair still vacationing in the Caribbean, Britons are looking to Home Secretary John Reid for answers, which he tends to give only elliptically for fear, he says, of compromising the ongoing investigation...