Word: jawings
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...Cassius! Go get him, Doug!" the fans chanted. "Get that loudmouth!" And in the first round, Doug almost did. Cassius leaned back, and a looping right caught him flush on the side of the jaw. Clay's knees buckled, his eyes glazed, and he grabbed the ring rope for support. Desperately, Clay shot jabs at Jones's forehead-light, harmless punches designed only to keep Jones at arm's length, to survive the round. The second was even, and in the third, his head clear now, Cassius took command. He raked Jones with left hooks...
Rocked early in the first round by a sharp right to the jaw, Clay barely managed to rally and outpoint his tough, aggressive opponent, Doug Jones...
...referee stopped the fight after a roundhouse right caught Eisen squarely on the jaw...
...scene is scarcely credible, but in other episodes the character of the sadistic sergeant fits Douglas like epidermis-the actor has a jaw like a barracuda and a grin full of rusty fishhooks and what have you. Walker, 21-year-old son of Jennifer Jones and the late Robert Walker, is the ideal idealistic dogface-and he has the looks and the charm of his famous father. What's wrong with the picture is its script. Scenarist Henry Denker says some things that cannot be said too often: a life once lost can never be replaced; anyone who kills...
...looks like a cross between a grumpy polar bear and a tipsy Greek philosopher. As his equally ancient wife ("a nagger's nagger") frets, scolds, and pokes at him, Ustinov's countenance becomes a weather map of changing frustrations. His eyes ski off at rakish tangents. His jaw chomps erratically over what could be a mouthful of elastics. His arms and fingers do little arcs and spins like dangling mobiles. Even after Ustinov begins to speak, these body tics go on, and it is a tribute to Ustinov as a mugger's mugger that he gets laughs...