Word: vivid
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...will not, however, be used, according to an e-mail from Peter J. Churness, Rebel Planet’s Executive Producer. Another title, “Land of Lies,” concerns overcoming lies about God in order to move closer to Him. Set in a bright, vivid fantasy world, the game has a certain Narnian creativity to it.A SPLIT SENSIBILITYSimultaneous self-description as Christian media companies while minimizing the overt Christian content to appeal to the widest possible could lead these companies to contradiction. But it can lead to a greater audience.Jonathan J. Loch...
...light flickers on, Moss comes out of the projector room and jumps into the discussion. He pushes the students, asking them what parts were clear, what parts they liked or didn’t, simultaneously offering his own praise of certain points in the film. He likes the vivid student discussion and participation; they offer good praise and constructive criticism—critique is an important aspect of the class.“We’re just on a schedule where all of us have just finished filming,” says Jordan...
...prosecute the war, but how best to leave it. This appeared true for many of President Bush's strongest supporters and even for some of the most adamant traditional hawks in Congress-as Pennsylvania Democratic Congressman John Murtha's call for a hasty withdrawal of U.S. troops most vividly demonstrated. The Senate resolution calling for a "significant transition to full Iraqi sovereignty"-that is, Iraqi control of the war effort-in 2006 was less vivid than the House's ugly theatrics surrounding the Murtha proposal, but perhaps more meaningful. Senate Democrats failed to win a commitment to the gradual withdrawal...
...shimmering lake. One is a journalist intent on exposing a government scandal, the other a source nervously feeding him a scoop. It's a remarkable scene from the Danish political thriller King's Game - not for what happens, but for how it looks. The lake is such a cool, vivid blue, you feel you could reach out and dip your hand in it. The image is so sharp, the colors so clear, you can make out the subtle pinstripes on the journalist's suit. By the time it ended its run at the Curzon cinema in London's Soho...
...effectively scary as single-mindedly evil Mahisha. In Saavitri’s story, a young woman follows the god of death, Yama, into the underworld and entreats him to resurrect her husband from the dead. Although they communicate solely through their hands and eyes, their mimed interactions are so vivid the mind imagines their mouths following the gestures of Rau-Murthy (as Saavitiri) and Suratha Elango ’06 (as Yama). The final vignette was similarly impressive. In their portrayals of the Hindu mythological heroines, the all-female South Asian cast doubly confirmed the strength of Indian females...