Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"reveries" Definitions
  1. plural of reverie.
"reveries" Antonyms

188 Sentences With "reveries"

How to use reveries in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "reveries" and check conjugation/comparative form for "reveries". Mastering all the usages of "reveries" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World" is not rated.
Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World promises to be an
The reveries, Hale argues, have altered the hosts in a disturbing way.
Until then, expect more blog post reveries, utopian pronouncements, and happy shareholders.
Heffernan's own relationship to the web, rich with small wonders, reveries, and
The reveries are entertaining vignettes, like little movies within a TV show.
In these action-interrupting reveries, Medea narrates her passage across the desert.
There will be no rose petals or reveries, only bile and spite.
But she has earned a following among listeners who value unmonitored reveries.
Gainza's lambent art criticism shines alongside a series of personal reveries and threnodies.
They deliver their apprehensions as gently as they can, turning reckonings into reveries.
Ford tapped into that with the Reveries, once he felt the hosts were ready.
Pindar, for his part, keeps drifting off into reveries about the nature of time.
These memories, from past roles, can also be lifted from reveries, and so we see Peter seemingly threatening the park's staff with a menacing line from Henry IV: Part II. But I don't think reveries end with the past roles of artificial intelligence.
We knew, of course, that the Reveries were what caused the hosts to start glitching.
The director and documentarian has just released Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World.
Life, which was an apex for the kind of plot-light reveries Malick has made
Agata, seeking solace in reveries about the priest, drifts away from her husband and daughter.
"Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World" is Werner Herzog's documentary about the internet.
But these reveries are punctuated by these powerful, pained notes that hit like joy buzzers.
Yet while they look like flashbacks, they're closer to idealized reveries than to raw memories.
Subsisting on apples from an orchard and rainwater, she wrote constantly, spiraling into religious reveries.
Here's to the wondering reveries of the dreamers and the dawdlers, for the real aha!
And his latest documentary, Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World, does the job beautifully.
Welty was bewildered by some of the poetic reveries Dillard used to capture the natural world.
The restless camera tags alongside him, showing you what he sees, his erotic reveries and yearning.
Ford's injection of "reveries" into Host code has messed with the first of these a little.
It's a rich, dreamy pop cut designed to soundtrack romantic teen reveries and bleary spring mornings.
Morrison's movies feel like half-remembered reveries formed from memories you can no longer consciously recall.
Again and again, we become unwitting participants in Moreau's sado-masochistic spectacles, his beatific and brooding reveries.
"Lo and Behold" is a film about dreamers, yet the reveries of the title mean something more.
They make for striking companions with Werner Herzog's documentary Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World.
Dr. Ford has programmed these "reveries" to make the robots more emotionally nuanced and convincing — more human.
Like the atom, it can also be split, into ever-narrower, more time- and place-specific reveries.
J.P. Liz Harris, who records as Grouper, turns pretty sounds and slow, sparse arrangements into haunted reveries.
Into his reveries comes the inevitable moment of truth: Mom, in a pink dress, holding his pants.
A new documentary entitled Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World is being premiered at Sundance tomorrow.
The idea of dreaming—remember the "reveries" of the subtitle—trips the associative trigger to the next level.
The 2114th-century architecture invites reveries of characters from Edith Wharton novels leaving their cards at imposing mansions.
There's also a slinky seductiveness to the way he handles some of the folk-tune reveries midway through.
The latest system update, which included Ford's "reveries" have allowed certain hosts to access memories from these previous lives.
The resulting virtual-reality reveries are the ultimate fantasy for some users, who can escape into perfect digital dreams.
In the strangest of all the reveries, Owen becomes a Swedish man named Snorri who accidentally kills an alien.
After the early reveries of family happiness, frustration runs through the narrative; the story grows increasingly shadowed and anxious.
As is often the case with other people's reveries, you may not necessarily want to share in this one.
Through the vision of designers such as Jo Mielziner and Boris Aronson, we see both squalor and southern reveries.
Then, it was time for the moment that – even in his most blissful reveries – he never thought would come.
Reveries, backstories and even the idea of hosts training on other hosts all give a nod to real AI research.
Now, it looks like we're in for a second season of nosebleeds and 1980s reveries just in time for Halloween.
In contrast, Clementine seems to be swept away by reveries until she is decommissioned, and replaced by a newer Clementine model.
Mr. Moretti shifts among Margherita's different states of consciousness — reveries and reminiscences — as fluidly as he peels back layers of emotion.
Are these Freudian fits, "Crucible"-like convulsions, orgiastic reveries, initiation ceremonies (into femininity, etc.) or sly performances from attention-hungry adolescents?
Then, there was one of Disney's weirdest reveries: the dance of the pink elephants, as imagined by a champagne-fuelled Dumbo.
There are almost no speeches or reveries (those happen in the song and dance); all the dialogue moves the action forward.
Even with reveries, Peter isn't programmed to recognize these inconsistencies, let alone ask the larger questions about the context of the photo.
The difference between Trump and Mitty is that the fictional character kept his reveries private, while the president constantly blurts them out.
Soudant says her business went under and her career was irreparably damaged because of Pitt's refusal to pay for costly architectural reveries.
Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World is currently playing in select cities throughout the US and can be watched online.
And she approaches her relationship with Ford the same way, with vague, symbol-heavy reveries and jokes covering over some deeply uncomfortable details.
"Does the internet dream of itself?" is the logline for director Werner Herzog's new documentary, Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World.
We've already written extensively about "Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World", the new Werner Herzog documentary/tone poem on the Internet.
If you've entertained "Green Acres"-inspired reveries on the joys of "farm living," this documentary may rid you of them in short order.
Such reveries underestimate the growing power of crony  and finance capital—a social formation that's no longer just a bugaboo of dogmatic Marxists.
Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World is, in other words, a Werner Herzog documentary—and very much lives up to its name.
Herzog's new film, Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World, is concerned with the internet and how dramatically it has altered our planet.
Mima guides people into reveries of bygone comforts, like the taste of freshly plucked berries and the sight of birds flying in open skies.
Even before ishi vu gave titled his new EP Drömhus (Swedish for "dream house"), it was clear that he had a fascination with nighttime reveries.
Many are reveries in which the only animation in a precisely balanced composition might come from a wayward breeze or a slight shift in illumination.
This film consists primarily of the actors Charlotte Rampling and Tom Courtenay talking and getting lost in their own private reveries and it's utterly gripping.
But my reveries are tempered by a disquieting thought, grown louder in the past few days: that our fellow Americans do not have our back.
Often, talking about "Pose" led Murphy into reveries about "Glee," another show that had been designed to give queer kids characters they could root for.
The nominees are: • The French author Mathias Énard's "Compass," which centers on the memories and reveries of an insomniac music scholar (translated by Charlotte Mandell).
J.P. Pain, self-doubt and depressive reveries have long filled the songs of the Scottish band Frightened Rabbit, which released "No Real Life" on Christmas.
Again, it's unclear why some characters are completely unaffected by the reveries, while others have fully abandoned their previous identities to forge a new path.
A lot of the hosts are infuriating because of how unevenly the "reveries," which allow them to access memories from previous lives, affect their behavior.
Now, for his latest documentary, Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World, Herzog has charged headlong into the strange wilderness that is the modern Internet.
But because the reveries take place inside the minds of Owen and Annie, they possess a narrative neatness that is psychologically realistic, rather than artistically so.
One of the biggest signs that something has gone wrong with the reveries is what happens when one Host seems unable to get with the program.
" The book ends by casting its lens not on Onassis, however, but on Simon's bedside vigil: "I had many reveries, but my words came out simply.
It's always present in his music, too: His 14th studio album, "Hyperspace," out Friday, crosses vintage Pink Floyd reveries with futuristic-minded coproduction from Pharrell Williams.
My first time through, I just wanted Villeneuve to skip past all the glossy, sunlit mother-daughter reveries, and get back to the thoughtful, intelligent alien story.
You can get lost in these pictorial reveries as you trace the rays of light piercing the trees, brightening the dark waters and the reality-softening haze.
Apocalyptic themes have always played a major role in scifi and fantasy, but the flood of armageddon-related reveries in the 21st century is a whole different beast.
That is to say, by creating Westworld and imbuing its inhabitants with free will — the apparent end goal of "reveries" — Dr. Ford feels he will achieve godlike status.
It is highly unlikely that the EU will end the 2020s either as the smouldering wreck of Brexiteer reveries or as the muscular mega-power of Macroniste dreams.
Have the same conversation in Cleveland, and Cavaliers fans will answer with passionate reveries about their love for their city, and how city and team are symbiotically linked.
"Handle your plated jewelry just as gently — if not more so — as you would your pricey gold and silver pieces," advises jewelry designer and Tiny Reveries founder Alison McCarthy.
The character and meaning of this astonishing output—and its bearing on humankind—is the subject of Werner Herzog's latest documentary, "Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World".
This juicy nugget of techno-speculation materializes in the middle of Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World, a new documentary broadly about the internet from Werner Herzog.
You tend to forget about reveries, though, when the 101 freeway slows to a crawl, as it did when I began to navigate the road in Hollywood this spring.
Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World Even though it's a documentary, Werner Herzog's tiptoe through the trappings and tulip bulbs of technology sure seems like science fiction.
Hannah Goldfield and Peter Funch interrupted the solitary reveries of some passengers on the R train to learn a bit about them for New York Magazine's 50th anniversary issue.
If you want to see if your couch potato reveries might be interrupted, you can check what stations in your area are affected by going to the FCC's site.
Gori first learned about the condition from the Werner Herzog documentary Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World, and decided to seek out EHS sufferers in her native Italy.
Bicameralism (the voice that speaks to you) has been pretty much debunked as a theory of consciousness, but such a voice could force emergent behavior, similar to that of reveries.
The series is set in a world much like our own, with the addition of a single transformative technology: a threadlike experimental brain implant that produces virtual worlds called Reveries.
Herzog's documentary, Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World, takes a look at the perils and promise of living connected — and what this means for current and future generations.
The trailer is out for Werner Herzog's upcoming Netflix documentary about the Internet, "Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World," which is perhaps the most Herzog-y title possible.
In such conditions, candidates will win or lose based on their ability to excite voters and boost turnout and avoid lapsing into reveries about lost bipartisan and centrist Golden Ages.
Free from the pressures of her life in Manhattan, she plunged ever deeper into the subconscious reveries of the Cape Cod shore town, channeling its fleeting pleasures into lasting imagery.
Even when "the reveries" were causing hosts to deviate from their routines, we at least had those routines as a point of comparison, like the control group in an experiment.
One by one, his Bayern Munich teammates lifted themselves off the ground, out of their reveries and regrets, caught their breath, and sought him out to offer condolences and hugs.
"Fits of Rage" snaps her reveries into focus; the guitars still echo, but her voice leaps out from them, demanding accountability from someone who seems about to shrug her off.
Her first new song under that name arrived this week, and it's closer to the bubbly dance reveries of Robyn than the dark, textured electro experiments of her self-titled debut.
Carrà's buoyant, fanciful reveries provide an exquisite counterpoint to the studied lucidity that Morandi, whose works fill the gallery's largest room, brought to the gravity-bound objects of his tabletop universe.
Oriented by an array of such discrete reveries, each of these essays is itself a kind of extended moment, within which Searcy pauses, turns ideas about, attempts to take it all in.
Contemptuous of those who have fled Cuba and indifferent to the Castro supporters around him, Sergio indulges in erotic reveries, entertaining fantasies about his maid and memories of a high school sweetheart.
Theresa lets slip that Bernie's team (read: Elsie) has been voicing concerns about the hosts' ability to access past experiences through reveries and that he's ignored them (at her request, if you remember).
It has helped him and other members of his tribe remember the various lives they've lived across decades — something other hosts only achieved through the reveries code Ford deployed in the show's pilot.
"Read, read, read, read, read, read, read, read, read, read, read," says Werner Herzog, wrapping up the post-film Q&A for his latest doc, Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World.
His books are complex (and sometimes messy) feats of storytelling, often involving dreams, extended reveries, unreliable narrators — or a combination of all three — so that reality itself devolves into a game of telephone.
Though it isn't a documentary in the journalistic sense, Werner Herzog's Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World paints a unique picture of the bones and skin of our technologically interconnected universe.
He recalled in interviews how he would rush in from his solo baseball reveries to gobble down his dinner, only to be asked by his mother why he was in such a hurry.
Ms. Netrebko brings the thrill of possibility to all these reveries, which for her seem like not at all an act; she manages to make being over-the-top a vehicle for authenticity.
The show is definitely nurturing of left-leaning rebellious reveries and ends with a focus on the Paris Commune, the radical socialist and revolutionary government that ruled Paris for three months in 1871.
This screen adaptation of the Scottish author Lewis Grassic Gibbon's 1932 novel is aligned with Mr. Davies's somber, semi-autobiographical reveries about his lonely childhood and adolescence in grim, post-World War II London.
Which brings us, hopping and skipping over the many triumphs of a long and engaged career, to Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World, Herzog's new full-length documentary about our digital age.
Listening to the hypnotic tunes of the soundtrack, a feeling of estrangement permeates the viewer; the frantic activity of the vehicles on the ski slopes inspires reveries of alien machines colonizing an inhospitable planet.
" His nighttime reveries also spawned the concept of his next book, his 22nd, a compendium of the films that enraptured him growing up, including "The Count of Monte Cristo" and "The Mark of Zorro.
Michal Marczak's All These Sleepless Nights captures the twilight reveries and dawn revelations of Warsaw's college-age young people, following them from wandering walks to thumping clubs to sunrise drug sessions and everything in between.
Such reveries are not as radical or outside the mainstream as the rhetorical shock of this language may suggest—think of the sit-down strikes of the 1930s or the urban riots of the 1960s.
After last week's run of six new releases, Will and Tim settle down this week and dig deep into Todd Phillips' War Dogs and debate Werner Herzog's Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World.
Hynes identified one of Maine's talents as evoking an "isolation in music regardless of instrumentation," but the beauty of The House is that those lonely reveries are often interrupted by the voices of his friends.
Children's Books Whether they are nostalgic reveries of those who came long ago to this nation of immigrants, or the brutal nightmares of worldwide millions fleeing war, violence and persecution today, memories of migration matter.
I doubt it, and I doubt that my own ecstatic reveries (for the sake of argument, let's assume that I would have enjoyed Noma Mexico as much as everybody else) would help on that front.
While passing through the Strait of Magellan, near Chile's southern tip, as she recalled in her memoir, she conjured up fairies and beasts on walls of ice — an early, whimsical prelude to her screen reveries.
" The novel's presiding influence was Conrad Aiken, whom Winters had mocked as the author of "nocturnal reveries" about men who "commit murder to appropriate music, fall from skyscrapers, or wander in the lamplight in the rain.
LO & BEHOLD: REVERIES OF THE CONNECTED WORLD In this documentary the director Werner Herzog turns his attention to the online world, how much it has transformed our lives already and just how far it may go.
In this installment of VICE Talks Film, VICE's Ben Makuch sits down with the legendary German filmmaker and esteemed existential thinker, Werner Herzog, to discuss his new documentary, Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World.
" Their reveries are interrupted by an attacking Japanese airplane that the crew shoots down, as described by Mr. Glanzman with enormous excitement: "Every gunner had his sight trained on the 'meatball' — and speared it in midair.
Ford would want to send Dolores down the road into Wyatt-dom after instituting the Reveries system because he wants to unravel the mystery of the maze just as badly as does the Man in Black. Why?
When Luis picks up Isabela one rainy afternoon, the antiqued scene vaguely suggests the nostalgic reveries of Wong Kar Wai, even with the poster of a gun-toting Fidel Castro marking the 1959 overthrow of Batista's Cuba.
The move seems to have been fruitful: Since 303, Denitia has released three EPs' worth of colorful electro-pop reveries, like "Waiting," that center on themes of growth, personal limits and the search for home and community.
What matters is not that del Toro is a fanatical scholar of his medium but that, as we sensed in the grave reveries of " Pan's Labyrinth " (2006), he understands how fantasy invades and invests our waking lives.
Westworld In his Godlike capacity as the creative director and visionary behind Westworld, Dr. Ford has been tinkering with the mental capacities of the park's android hosts, like adding "reveries" that draw on memories of previous constructs.
James Bidgood, 230, is a photographer and filmmaker whose work — from early phantasmagoric beefcake photography to "Pink Narcissus," an erotic film anonymously released in 503 — is the subject of "James Bidgood: Reveries," a retrospective running through Sept.
She injects whimsical imagery (spying dolphins, "violent bedhead") into weightier reveries in a manner that can make your head, like the unlucky little girl's in "The Exorcist," perform what in ice skating they call a double axel.
That "Black Panther" inspires such reveries — and indeed was one of the most exciting, idea-generating movies of the year — is further proof that its differences are profound, even if it is another male-driven heroic tale.
Circumambulating the city one dreamy Sabbath afternoon, passing thousands of mortal men and women fixed in entrepreneurial reveries–tied to counters, nailed to benches, clinched to desks–does the magnetic virtue of their stock options attract them thither?
Westworld may be a testing ground for the combination of human consciousness and artificial intelligence, and reveries are a beta test of the major feature built atop 30 years of hidden-in-plain-sight AI research and development.
The show's narrative divides into the three stages of the drug trial, which consists of drugs named A, B, and C. In sequence, each pill forces the subjects into unconscious reveries, which we see played out as action.
Shot in stark, black-and-white digital video in humble, sometimes impoverished locales, the story opens and closes like an accordion, alternately bringing you into Horacia's private reveries and thrusting you out into the larger, often alien milieu.
His main collaborator here is the producer James Ford, from Simian Mobile Disco, and together they surround Mr. Albarn's voice with subliminally nostalgic synthesizers: puffy, rounded, unaggressive tones that provide a cozy backdrop for Mr. Albarn's morose reveries.
Instead of consigning himself to Walter Mitty-like reveries while pursuing his vocation as a concrete contractor, Norman soon resolved to seek out adventures of his own — to become a nonfictional version of his death-defying cartoon hero.
Lo & Behold: Reveries of the Connected World — The Internet loves Werner Herzog, to be sure—but how does the 73-year-old director of such humanist docs as Grizzly Man and My Best Fiend feel about the Internet age?
You get the sense of a man whose neural network is wired differently — so much so that I felt compelled to ask his wife, Stacey, about these reveries when I ran into her in the Salt Lake City airport.
The visuals are not a narrative, and certainly not a showcase for the self-effacing Mr. Greene; they are more like a light show, a collection of animations pulsing along with the music, echoing the reveries in the songs.
The metaphorical path is the maze, and the bread crumbs leading them to the center have been the memories (or "reveries") of past constructs, with Arnold's "voice" guiding them through exactly the sort of hallucinations Mr. Jaynes's theory suggests.
So, for three months I walked through the red brick residential streets of the old industrial north, enrolled on a literature course (of course) and lost in teary-eyed contemplation to the kitchen sink reveries of Steven Patrick Morrissey.
In this, Hyman is something of an ideologue; he argues for complex pictures —pictorial worlds, really — that can convey our immersion in the reveries and ambiguities of everyday experience, in opposition to mere images of skill and good taste.
It was made in virtual reality, but more importantly, it feels like it can only truly exist in VR, and not even the exact same assets in a point-and-click port would so convincingly envelop the viewer into Jessica's reveries.
Hailed as the King of the Honkers, Mr. McNeely was at the forefront of a group of post-bop saxophonists who, in the late 260s, abandoned the heady reveries of jazz for the more gutbucket pleasures of rhythm and blues.
Their fifteenth and latest studio album, "There's a Riot Going On," out this Friday, March 1003, tends toward the softer side of their sound: The singles "Shades of Blue" and "She May, She Might" are up there with their sweetest reveries.
But its startling, playfully erotic, intensely palpable reveries remain embedded in my memory: the white bunny nestled between a woman's feathery high-heel mules, the baker's wife with a creamy, teasing bosom who leans over a display of luscious pastries.
"Her portraits of the figures who are transforming a field that hasn't changed all that much in the last century or more sound at once like messages from the future and like nostalgic reveries of life in a smaller, simpler world."
Her portraits of the figures who are transforming a field that hasn't changed all that much in the last century or more sound at once like messages from the future and like nostalgic reveries of life in a smaller, simpler world.
In another chapter, James briefly details how Futurism's founder, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, invited Fersen, who "was losing himself in the amorous reveries of classical antiquity," to write for his magazine, just as he had contributed to Fersen's important journal, Akademos.
He eventually found a way to combine the footage with the video by having characters watch The Ramona Flowers perform, throughout the video, on their iPhones and TVs, giving the sense that their magical dance-reveries are indeed inspired by the delightful track.
We know that, each day, the robots are reset, and sometimes, during the downtime, they receive firmware updates, not unlike your phone or TV. The latest update includes a feature called "reveries," represented by tiny physical improvisations that stem from stored memories.
The curator, Alona Pardo, has stuffed the Barbican's galleries with more than 300 works, but relied too much on innocuous classics from the 1960s to the 1990s: Peter Hujar's orgasmic youths, Robert Mapplethorpe's bodybuilders, Rineke Dijkstra's bloodied bullfighters, Isaac Julien's Harlem Renaissance reveries.
With a head full of bling-spangled reveries and a notebook full of rhymes, Patti (to use her most common nickname) hones her skills and indulges her dreams with her friend Hareesh (Siddharth Dhananjay), a pharmacist whose nom de mike is Jheri.
A musical with big numbers, intimate reveries and adult feelings, "La La Land" is a boy-meets-girl tale with early 21st-century rhythms (mostly good, even if its white stars are nestled, more self-consciously than naturally, in a multicultural world).
Heinrich Meier, in his new book, "On the Happiness of the Philosophic Life" (Chicago), offers an overview of Rousseau's thought through a reading of his last, unfinished book, "Reveries of a Solitary Walker," which he began in 1776, two years before his death.
At the start of the trailer for Lo and Behold: Reveries Of The Connected World, Werner Herzog's upcoming documentary about the internet, a well-permed news anchor sets up a mental exercise for the audience: Imagine reading your morning newspaper on a computer screen.
The trailer for 'Lo and Behold,' Werner Herzog's new film The hook of Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World, which premiered earlier this year in Sundance, is that it sends Herzog into uncharted territory—the virtual no-man's land of the internet.
But the way the reveries cause the Hosts to glitch out gives the pilot its spine, and the concerns about how to repair so many Hosts in one go without creating a massive demand for refunds drive the Westworld staff's storyline for the episode.
That storyline, like so many others in the film, is rendered with a heavy hand, lingering on Lester's rose-petal-filled reveries over Angela, and chased with genuine sexism in the way that Lester receives depth and shading not afforded to his even more caricatured wife, Carolyn.
With Trump's incessant self-congratulating reveries about his Electoral College upset, he presents himself as some magical conqueror, but his tally of electors was decidedly un-magical in the context of the last four decades and even less charmed when one examines the vote count behind it.
By the 1970s, the dynamism and poetic reveries yield to a sparer, but no less intense formalism, exemplified by Nevelson's rectilinear collages in which thick, orderly brown and black borders draw the viewer's gaze deeper into miniaturized, highly geometric patterns, some formed from colored embossed paper and bright foil.
What matters is not the words of the person at the next table but the feeling of nearness—the sense of being able to carve out an identity among other identities, of being potentially private in a public space and casually public even while lost in private reveries.
And he was grateful, too, for her effect on his father, whose politeness, when he recalled that he was in the company of a young woman, would jar him from what otherwise were interminable reveries and would bring his attention back for a while to the here and now.
When Andrew's not caught up in his lustful reveries (not to mention Maury's encouragement to indulge every last deranged one of them), his friendship with Nick is genuinely touching, and a real portrayal of how hard it can be for teens to navigate relationships when they're growing up at different rates.
At the Last Judgment, the Last Intellectual—that Saturnine hero of modern culture, with his ruins, his defiant visions, his reveries, his unquenchable gloom, his downcast eyes—will explain that he took many "positions" and defended the life of the mind to the end, as righteously and inhumanly as he could.
To mesh Einstein's quotidian world with his reveries, the show — directed by Cara Reichel for Prospect Theater Company at 59E59 Theaters — invents a siren-like figure, a beautiful woman named Josette (Alexandra Silber) who appears to Einstein (Zal Owen) only in his dreams, and always in a long crimson gown.
Fawcett finds ecstasy in and out of the Amazon, as does Mr. Gray, who fills the screen with intimate reveries and overwhelming spectacle, including a harrowing interlude during World War I. Until now, Mr. Gray has tended to work on a somewhat modest scale, often with art films that play with genre.
Across two long walks in February and March — one in Central Park as spring tried to prematurely bloom, and another in the sunny mountains above Los Angeles — Feist was voluble and loose, prone to discursive reveries even as she described the personal turmoil and uncertainty that led to this knotty, taxing album.
Wiener-Dog, 6Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World: 6Complete Unknown, 6 Southside With You: 5Ali & Nino: 5Swiss Army Man: 5 Hunt for the Wilderpeople: 4Holy Hell: 4Dark Night: 4Goat: 4Joshy: 4Other People: 4Sing Street: 4 BelgicaSleightMichael Jackson's Journey from Motown to Off the WallTallulahYoga HosersThe HollarsLovesong Have something to say about this story?
JOSHUA BARONE at 3 minutes 24 seconds Ms. Uchida may have been a bit under the weather last Friday at Carnegie Hall — she tucked a tissue into her Steinway and used it discreetly between movements — but that didn't stop the flow of sonatas, with their storms, their reveries, their fleet-footed moments of light.
A fight aboard a moving train and a final face-off at an African port both recall the 1999 Barry Sonnenfeld disaster Wild Wild West in their pacing, framing, and offbeat comedy, but Legend also reaches for Legends Of The Fall gravity and beauty at intervals, and occasionally emulates Malick's hushed sunlit reveries from The New World.
It was a more than slightly different version of himself that acted his part in these happy scenes: Seamus as a confident and blithe man, but also warm and generous, and possessed of a bedroom manner suave enough to insure that the previously reticent Polish girl concluded his reveries roaring the head off herself in gales of sexual transport.
The subjects of her reveries include a dashing guitar-strumming gaucho (Yurel Echezarreta), who runs off with an uptight virgin (Kenita R. Miller, who doubles as Bella's fretful mom), and a sexy Chinese cowboy (Paolo Montalban), who strips down to a gold thong to strut his stuff in a number inspired by a traditional Chinese folk tune.
Jolted from our reveries by the more brutal stories of the merciless, news-cycle variety, it's as though we've woken from a beautiful dream to realize that having once elected an idealistic black president did not in fact ensure that other revolutions would quickly follow, and indeed that certain structures of power, soft and hard, remain all the more firmly entrenched and internalized.
This stylish hippy temperament — laden with spirituality, hidden meanings and symbolism — was exhibited in the period's flamboyant clothing fabrics, in rock concert posters, and album music covers; all basically inspired by the exquisitely flowing lines of Egon Schiele, the art of Aubrey Beardsley and Georges de Feure, William Morris's wallpaper designs, William Blake's visionary drawings, and Mucha's whirling shapes expressing ersatz reveries of quixotic females.
A director uncommonly sensitive to streetscapes and parks, Iosseliani's dismay with increased policing and privatization of public space is palpable, as he films conflict between the indigent and the authorities with uncommon frankness while also indulging reveries about the possibility of escape — into a handmade home of one's own or, in the film's most surreal sequences, through an elysian courtyard replete with nymph and stork.
" There are perverse reveries about nameless women who are half Virgin Mary, half Belle Dame Sans Merci: "You are the only form that does not radiate tedium, because you change with our feelings, because, in kissing our joy, you cradle our grief and tedium, you are the opium that comforts and the sleep that brings rest, and the death that gently folds our hands on our breast.
They say it all should just go away: both the groundbreaking "I Spy" adventure series of the 1960s and the hugely successful "The Cosby Show" family sitcom of the 1980s; the childhood reveries once delivered by the now fallen comedian, whose droll timing, sharply observed (and deftly exaggerated) details influenced generations of stand-up comics; the contributions he made to education on television and to educational institutions throughout the country.
It's what William Gibson imagined it would be, after wandering around Vancouver, listening to his new Walkman for the first time: "A consensual hallucination," he wrote in Neuromancer about cyberspace, The metaphors for the internet that I think of first—a series of tubes, a cloud—aren't even mentioned in Lo and Behold, Reveries Of A Connected World, Werner Herzog's new ten-chapter, two hour documentary about cyberspace.
Herzog's 98-minute documentary Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World is divided into ten parts, featuring a narration by Herzog in his famous German accent, along with highly sobering perspectives from an array of internet experts, scientists, and even the co-founder of Tesla Motors and CEO of aerospace company SpaceX Elon Musk, who admits to Herzog in the film that he rarely remembers any good dreams, only the nightmares.

No results under this filter, show 188 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.