swooningly การใช้
- At times, the movie suggests a swooningly loony Transylvanian rhapsody.
- Clinton, who received 43 percent in 1992, today does not seem swooningly popular.
- Yet Smith can also wax as swooningly romantic as " Wuthering Heights ."
- Baroque and swooningly romantic, " Besieged " plays at a high emotional pitch.
- And Jackson provides the perfect setting-- a movie as swooningly self-intoxicated as its schoolgirl protagonists.
- A swooningly handsome Antonio Banderas wanders into a dusty Mexican border town in search of a suave drug lord named Bucho ( neatly played by Joaquim De Almeida ).
- While the film gives both Sands ( powerfully played by John Lynch ) and Gerard a vaguely Christlike aura, it doesn't swooningly give its heart to them.
- Director Norman Jewison, who hit the date-movie jackpot with " Moonstruck, " knows exactly how to give Diane Drake's swooningly romantic script the perfect fairy-tale setting.
- And so we flitter our eyes swooningly, envisaging the passionate love triangle between Army flier Affleck, his best friend ( Hartnett ) and a Navy nurse ( the British Beckinsale ) and hoping, against all odds, that things turn out swell.
- Allmusic's Ned Raggett describes the " Lee Remick " as being " quirky, cinema-obsessed, wry . . . . might not have been as swooningly romantic ( or regretfully so ) as many future highlights, but in its own odd little way it shows more than a little something of what made the Go-Betweens so special.
- In the " Los Angeles Times ", Carina Chocano stated, " the novel has made it to the screen in the form of a plodding, tone-deaf, overripe, overheated Oscar baiting telenovela . . . Doubtless it's an enormously daunting task to adapt a book at once so sweeping and internal, so swooningly romantic and philosophical, but it takes a lighter touch and a more expansive view than Newell and Harwood seem to bring ."
- Nobody kisses anyone else until it becomes clear that both parties have pulses, and everyone gets to keep all their limbs . " Michael O'Sullivan said in his one-and-a-half star review for " The Washington Post " that the film is " Cute without being especially clever, it's as pallid and as brain-dead as its zombie antihero . . . It's less funny and self-aware than " Shaun of the Dead ", less swooningly romantic than " Twilight " and less scary than pretty much anything else out there with zombies in it ."