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  • So Eastwood plays him far more likeably, far closer to himself.
  • Days later, on 29 April 1977, their debut composed by TV Smith, were likeably self-deprecating:
  • And Rea puts a likeably downbeat face-- sharp without being sour-- on his " ink-stained printer and journalist, " who comes off considerably better than his contemporary colleagues have in recent Hollywood movies.
  • There's a likeably smirky boyishness to the boys _ cinched up in their suits with their hair slightly mussed, they look the way we imagine they did when their mothers dressed them up for their eighth-grade class photos.
  • _" The English Patient " _ This elegant historical romance _ based on Michael Ondaatje's popular novel set in Egypt and Italy just before and during World War II _ was an ambitious, likeably confident, eye-filling spectacle par excellence.
  • The film, which opened the Seattle International Film Festival last week and opens widely Friday, is trying, in its heart of hearts, to be an old-fashioned screwball comedy : a story of likeably eccentric characters doing goofy things in the name of love.
  • The two likeably pretty-boy anchors, Dan ( Josh Charles ) and Casey ( Peter Krause ), sit at their anchor desks and, as the seconds are counted out until they're on the air, talk about their lives'most pressing issues.
  • Donovan's performance as the lead character also received praise for his likeably lighthearted, smart-mouthed, and vengeful spirit . " Burn Notice " has also been praised for its strong supporting cast members, slick production values, intriguing narrative, and dry comedic humor.
  • It is easy to see why some would call James Richardson a  nature poet; not only do his poems, and especially his early ones, draw on fairly common images and the phenomena of the physical world, he also shows a likeably human relationship to his environment, the kind we tend to imagine Wordsworth had this work is feeling and respectful, written very much from open-minded observation and experience.
  • Back then, as Robin Hood's opening instalment made clear, this nation was engaged in a ruinously expensive and unwinnable war in the Middle East at the behest of an expansive global superpower . " He also praised the cast, feeling that Armstrong " succeeds in being likeably noble, a possible sufferer from crusades-induced post-traumatic stress, yet still spry . . . But it's the baddies who give the new Robin Hood its winning tension.