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"wrings" Synonyms
squeezes scrunches twists kneads screws turns writhes coils compresses contorts curls mangles presses strains squeezes dry squashes crushes mashes wrenches milks chokes throttles strangles strangulates garottes garrottes(UK) garrotes(US) extracts pulls wrests uproots pries prizes yanks corkscrews roots out tears out draws out pulls out plucks removes draws takes out deracinates extricates eradicates scrounges ekes out scrapes up scrapes together extorts forces coerces exacts elicits bleeds gouges fleeces skins pinches obtains by force compels dragoons racks harrows lacerates pierces rends stabs wounds distresses hurts pains torments tortures tears at troubles plagues agonizes(US) afflicts agonises(UK) besets harasses jerks tugs snatches grabs tears seizes heaves rips takes prises peels cashes in on exploits benefits profits capitalises(UK) capitalizes(US) piggybacks takes advantage of profits from sucks dry takes advantage makes money from does well from does well out of makes the most of rides on the coat-tails makes a killing out of abuses manipulates misuses victimises(UK) victimizes(US) cheats enslaves swindles uses preys on ill-treats dumps on imposes on defrauds cons stiffs bilks diddles suckers stings cozens hustles rooks flimflams does shortchanges forms works shapes blends massages moulds(UK) pounds pummels(US) malaxates mixes rubs strokes aerates alters distorts deforms warps bends misshapes buckles disfigures malforms squinches gnarls levies charges imposes lays demands assesses puts fines taxes places collects sets gathers mulcts raises calls summons holds grips bears clasps grasps clenches clutches carries owns possesses has clings to commands adheres clinches handles palms secures press compressions nips force handclasps pressure More

122 Sentences With "wrings"

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

The British singer's big, soulful voice wrings emotion from every line.
Nearly everyone wrings out as much authenticity as possible from their lines.
Credit to Brad, who wrings his hands and desperately tries to placate her.
If Lerner hand-wrings over how much more money he makes than a
It wrings a sneering performance from James Cromwell as Pius's jealous mentor, Cardinal Spencer.
But bringing machine learning into the mix wrings much more out of the audio stream.
Tizeti's business model wrings cost efficiencies from every part of the development process, he said.
We are a far cry from the infantile way Hollywood wrings cheap laughs from bodily fluids.
Her latest project is "Motherland," which wrings comedy out of the sometimes torturous life of a mom.
When he tackles cases, he weighs multiple options and sometimes wrings his hands even after he has decided.
Libman Wonder Mop uses microfiber strips, wrings out easily (but keeps hands dry), and costs less than $10.
The new horror film Cam understands this potential, and wrings both scares and some visual ingenuity out of it.
And every time a new poll shows evangelical support for Trump at a steady high, the commentariat wrings its hands.
Sitting in the green room awaiting her set at Los Angeles's Nerdmelt Showroom, she swings her feet and wrings her hands.
This simple replacement is actually a massive improvement to the film and finally wrings some entertainment out of the Star Wars prequels.
But Korean illustrator and motion graphics designer Shinyoung Kim wrings surprising joy from this grim tale in his short animated film, Eden.
But this time around she wrings a little more synthetic magic from her stated insistence on incorporating new instruments into her pieces.
Like its finest antecedents, it wrings tears from its romance and thrills from a steadfast belief in old-fashioned, big-feeling cinema.
Instead Mr. Sinton wrings his corpulent instrument for its full range of values: toneless smears; soul-baring swells; chomping, roughed-up blasts.
Armitage wrings every ounce of feeling, drama and even humor — mostly at the expense of the dimwitted Baretski — from this earnest story.
Funny because Saadawi wrings a good deal of black humor out of the way the monster's pieces fall off at inopportune moments.
Like the play, this scene wrings all the pleasure possible out of its familiar tropes even as it revamps their meaning entirely.
Grounded in realism (rather than space lasers and explosions), the movie wrings its suspense out of a slow, steady ascent into the unknown.
He often wrings his hands, the very gesture that was deemed, he says, too effeminate in the working-class milieu of his childhood.
As Dennis Harvey from Variety wrote, "A witless script wrings few laughs from its retread conceits, but it too often doesn't even try."
So, if Drug A is priced at $100, and a PBM wrings a 20 percent discount, it keeps a portion of that $403 rebate.
Instead, some Democrats ally with payday lenders and wrings hands over the deficit; others still denigrate single-payer health care as a futile dream.
Even here, though, Ms. DeLappe shows her sophisticated grasp of exposition by indirection and of the telling, seemingly insignificant detail that wrings the heart.
And Waystar Royco is so broken that it takes whatever was good in Shiv (admittedly a tiny few droplets) and wrings it out of her.
The Human Rights Watch festival's most powerful film, Mehrdad Oskouei's "Starless Dreams," wrings a poignant twist on the "Sisters are Doin' It for Themselves" concept.
Maybe if its leadership wrings their hands and looks anguished for a while, public attention will move on before they have to make any tough decisions.
A carbon tax wrings marginal changes out of the system, incrementally; it does nothing to prepare for more large-scale, fundamental shifts further down the road.
Territory wrings efficiency out of its network of chefs, which has a high retention rate and allows the company to act in an asset light way.
The music they make is sparse, but crushing drone pieces out of slow-moving lute melodies and acrid, smoky feedback that Jarmusch wrings from electric guitars.
"[The] air acts like a big sponge that sops up water from the lake and wrings it out on land," NASA and NOAA's SciJinks website says.
He achieves a striking Sinatra-lite on "I'll Be Home for Christmas" and wrings "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" into a scene of pure pathos.
It is one peculiar vision, among the many that occur to Schutz, of worldwide calamity, and the work wrings from that a precarious but ingenious beauty.
Maybe you don't, if you find Boeheim the kind of dour perfectionist who wrings the joy out of college basketball while seeking whatever advantage he can get.
The magic here is in the electric guitar work—played both by Hatakeyama and Tetuzi Akiyama—that wrings totally unfamiliar shapes out of an intimately familiar instrument.
Don Shirley is a really flat character on the page, if you think about it, but Ali wrings every bit of emotion and nuance out of him.
And "Colossal" itself wrings a great deal of fun — and also some genuine terror, by no means all of it monster-related — from its blithely bizarre conceit.
While the world wrings its hands over the rise of "fake news" influencing elections, she welcomes the blurring of real and fake in the search for deeper truth.
I don't know if there's a director who captures soul-soothing warmth and tranquility better than Meyers, who wrings genuine emotion even from her more surface-level stories.
Director Sharon Maguire (reprising that role from the original) wrings what humor she can from what feels like an awfully familiar, bordering-on-tired premise for a romantic comedy.
Mr. Mingarelli wrings a remarkable amount of drama from whether the group can make a properly warm soup, but horror simmers beneath: How will they handle their Jewish captive?
While she wrings her hands over random Facebook comments and other ephemera, she refuses to engage seriously with the substantive arguments that have been made on behalf of #MeToo.
While the U.S. wrings its hands over what to do with online haters and abusers on social media, other countries have a more direct approach: throw the book at them.
"Museebat" wrings an affecting story out of Eesha, a Pakistani-American college student who lives with conservative, but deeply caring, family members (much of the episode's dialogue is in Urdu).
The cognitive dissonance she experiences every time Etsy announces a move that wrings additional revenue out of its sellers is the product of a tension that isn't exactly Etsy's fault.
Maybe it's a self-parodying pastiche of the worst conventions of reality TV. Maybe it's an egregious example of how reality TV wrings conflict out of participants at their expense.
She also wrings appropriately fidgety, raw-nerved performances from Mr. Simpson and Ms. Lupe, while Mr. Oliver is pitch-perfect as the drug rep and as Him's bro-ish best friend.
Fatima wrings her hands as she describes how two armed men raped her and the other women as they were on their way to sell palm oil at the local market.
Starring Maya Rudolph and Fred Armisen as married couple June and Oscar, it's a show that wrings every last bit of humor out of the day-to-day humdrum of domestic partnership.
The creative seas of the big-budget games industry ride unending tides of stagnation and reinvention, a cycle of death and renewed life that wrings millions of dollars out of consumers every year.
Our national discussions about cybersecurity and privacy follow a frustrating pattern: a headline-grabbing incident like the recent Capital One breach occurs, Congress wrings its hands and policymakers more or less move on.
This is just one more day in a wrecked life, and ultimately the show wrings little out of John as a theatrical creation, proving that drinking can smother drama as well as people.
As in "Breaking the Waves," Mazzoli wrings ferocious intensity from familiar-seeming materials: folkish ballads and wheezing harmonicas are blended into a gorgeously eerie orchestral fabric, one that includes dangling guitars brushed with whisks.
Apple wrings reams of obsessive media coverage out of events like this in a way that no other company can, and the chief narrative question that it's constantly addressing is—can Apple still innovate?
She blooms a few sheets of gelatin in warm water for the semifreddo, and then blanches a generous handful of spinach, shocks it in ice water quickly, and wrings out excess water with her hands.
PARIS/MADRID (Reuters) - PSA Group struck a cost-cutting deal with Spanish unions at its newly acquired Opel division, as the French carmaker's chief executive Carlos Tavares wrings concessions from workers in return for investment.
This show offers a two-for-one deal on guitar-based excitement: Palehound's Ellen Kempner, from New England, wrings vivid emotions from her instrument, while Weaves, from Toronto, explore the wilder side of psychedelic pop.
If you're a parent, on the other hand, or the kind of person who wrings their hands about what's happening to Kids These Days, this might be just the thing that reassures you they're just fine.
This column wrings its hands about N.F.L. punting on fourth-and-short: if a coach orders a try that fails, he's blamed; if a coach sends in the punter and the team loses, the players are blamed.
That spills over into her appearances on shows like Saturday Night Live or The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon, where she wrings laughs from her spot-on singing impersonations of Britney Spears' nasal tone or Celine Dion's soprano.
Mr. Alden wrings every bit of unsettling darkness from this curious work in an excitingly contemporary production that employs inventive videos and even electronic tweaks of the instruments in the orchestra — here, players from the period ensemble Ruckus.
Like many high-profile borderland stories in American pop culture — the "Sicario" movies and the Netflix series "Narcos," for example — the new film wrings thrills from the epidemic of narco-violence that claims lives on a daily basis.
Ultimately, the company said it was seeing good cost performance as it wrings more out of the existing customers that it has despite facing headwinds coming from its commitment to increase compensation among some hourly workers to $15 per hour.
Her co-star Arthur Darvill wrings unusual pathos, too, out of the part of Oscar, the prospective husband who cannot come to grips with the fact that Charity may not be entirely "pure," to use the lingo of the show.
Ms. White, with her perma-sparkle and slight Texas accent, is a more nervous and ingratiating Nora than was the swaggering Ms. Metcalf; she wrings laughs everywhere she can, even from the flip of her skirt as she finishes her arias.
As she wrings her henna-stained hands at the thought of the regulations that have stymied her two attempts to open shops in the Swedish capital, the café owner parks himself at a neighbouring table in an ill-disguised effort to eavesdrop.
Mr. Vernon and his co-authors, Wade Pfau and Joseph Tomlinson, analyzed about 300 variations of retirement income strategies, and found that the "safe spending" approach generally wrings the most out of available benefits for middle-income retirees, while avoiding excess complexity.
She'll play the oldest iteration of the main character, Saird, a pioneer woman who gives birth to a stillborn baby and, while still covered in blood, throws herself on top of a wild turkey and wrings its neck so her other children won't starve.
From a moral standpoint, or from the point of view of my clients on death row, there is no meaningful difference between a justice who silently votes to allow an execution and a justice who publicly wrings her hands before casting the same vote.
All that said, you can go a long way in a movie like this solely on the chemistry and charm of the stars—this is the point of having movie stars in super-high-concept comedies—and the movie wrings Schumer and Hawn for all they're worth.
Home owner or renter wrings out some extra income by renting out all or part of their home, except that unlike with Airbnb, where the minimum stay is at least one night, with Globe, a host rents out his or her space for smaller increments of time.
In some ways, he will always be laboring under the premise that he cannot ever get enough respect, because he will never be adored the way Bear Bryant was; the outside world sees him as someone who wrings all the joy out of what is generally America's most purely joyful sport.
"Priestdaddy" being in part a memoir of Catholicism, Lockwood wrings a lot of good material out of the virgin birth of Jesus — she calls Joseph "a patient shadow, cucked by God" — but it is another creation myth, Athena bursting fully formed from the dome of Zeus, that springs to mind.
Forky is a character unlike any we've seen from this franchise before, in everything from his appearance (primitive and precarious, but oddly cute) to his voice (wiggly with panic, but gentle around the edges), and Toy Story 4 wrings plenty of laughs out of the bizarre sight of a spork with existential despair.
While Washington wrings its hands over Facebook's data-harvesting scandal and the continued palace intrigue of the Trump administration, most Americans tend to have their attention focused elsewhere: Why it matters: Trends like #deletefacebook might appear transformational and gain traction amongst Elon Musk's tech circles, but they often fail to break through for most Americans.
But as its characters try to make sense of a terrible thing — or, more accurately, an ongoing series of terrible things — The Family wrings some terrifically unsettling moments out of the constant, simmering tension surrounding the Warrens, the sex offender they wrongfully imprisoned for Adam's murder (Andrew McCarthy), the police and media circling the story, and Adam himself.
Meanwhile, Joy toils, and the camera focuses in on her hands as she carries her children, fixes her mother's plumbing, and wrings out a sopping mop, getting shards of broken glass in her palms in the process (a visual shattering of the possibility that Joy will be offered a pair of glass slippers, whether from a love interest or a venture capitalist).
Elie Faure's description is ravishing: Here the mystery of the greatest painting blazes forth, flesh more like flesh than flesh, nerves more like nerves than nerves, even if they are painted with rivers of rubies, burning sulfur, droplets of turquoise, lakes of crushed emeralds and sapphires, streaks of purple and pearl, a palpitation of silver that rustles and shimmers, an uncommon flame that wrings matter to its depths after having smelted all the jewels of its mines.
Billboard reviewed the single favorably, saying that "the song boasts a solid lyric, and as usual Dunn wrings every drop of emotion out of each line".
Above his head are written the words "Hie must du yn" or "Here you must go". The distraught victim, fully aware of her fate, wrings her hands together, pleading for her life.
Councillor Tuura is a fictional character in the Finnish comedy film series Uuno Turhapuro. He is the father of Uuno's wife Elisabeth Turhapuro (née Tuura), Uuno's father-in-law and married with Reetta Tuura, Elisabeth's mother. Uuno wrings when he speaking the official title of Councillor Tuura, vuorineuvos to vuoristoneuvos. He is chief executive officer of the Tuura Company.
The horse should be willingly guided or controlled with little or no apparent resistance and dictated to completely. A horse that pins his ears, conveying a threat to his rider, refuses to go forward, runs sideways, bounces his rear, wrings his tail in irritation or displays an overall poor attitude is not being guided willingly, and is judged accordingly.
It's > completely unacceptable that Ahmed should be left in limbo like this, while > the international community wrings its hands about the detainees the US no > longer wants. Surely he has more than sufficient compassionate grounds to be > allowed to come back to Britain. Ahmed must be released immediately and I > have written to George Bush to tell him so.
As she pours the last of her water and wrings out the last of her own sweat onto the small plant, she lies down to protect and nurture the bud. In a reverse of the opening scene, the camera pulls up. As the shot widens, we see a tree growing rapidly, apparently right out of Asha's body.
Curly rolls out the hose into the street. But in the process, the hoses are cut by a passing streetcar, with Curly starting to identify them after the first names of the young Dionne quintuplets. In frustration, Moe wrings Curly’s hands on the wringers. Meanwhile, Curly sneaks out to visit his girlfriend Maisie (Beatrice Curtis) to celebrate her birthday despite the restrictions.
The music video, which was directed by Roman White, premiered on CMT on May 19, 2011. In the video, Sweeney and her husband are shown walking around their spacious home separately, both appearing distraught; Sweeney tears up, and the man frequently wrings his hands. At the end of the video, the two finally come together to sleep in the same bed.
"Run" received three stars out of five from Digital Spy, who said that Lewis "wrings every last drop of emotion out of Gary Lightbody's lyrics, channeling her inner Mariah for some almighty warbling at the crescendo". The Sentinel described the single as "so much better" than Snow Patrol's original song. "It's powerful, painful and the choir behind it takes it on to another level."Spence, Darren.
Cash Box (January 12, 1963): > Jackson who's currently cashing in "Gettin' ready For The Heartbreak" sends > up another striking contender for dual-market chartdom. It's a pulsating, > cha cha like romantic heartbreaker, tagged "Tell Him I'm Not Home," that > Chuck wrings every once of emotion out of. Standout ork-choral backdrop > (with exciting back-and-forth vocal play) conducted by Tony Bruno. The > soulful undercut finds a tantalizing rock-a-waltz-like setting.
Born with the plain name Gencho Gunchev and with the soul of an adventurer, he cannot settle with the daily grind of a clerk. Using his charm, Gunchev begins relationships with rich women and after that disappears with their money. Pretending to be the famous freelance architect Yastrebovski, he wrings a huge amount of money out of a group of naïve people. The swindling is caught in a bar where he squanders the money of those people.
The songs on Colfax, which was released in June 2014, combined Vlautin's admired lyrics about characters from the America's hinterland and their everyday struggles, with Boone's vocals, the emotion of which wrings out the pain of the characters. Colfax was well received by the critics and scored 87 on Metacritic with seven positive reviews. Following the release of Colfax the band embarked on a European tour. They have since toured in North America and Australasia, and returned to Europe.
After the ape is loaded onto his truck, the scientist callously pushes the man into the gorilla's grasp and stolidly watches as the beast wrings his neck. Back at his lab, Walters and his assistant Miss Strand (Fay Helm) transplant glandular material from Dorothy into Cheela. There was discussion by Miss Strand that Walters has previously grafted the glands of different animals like placing a guinea pig's glands into a rabbit and a frog's glands into a mouse.
Master Li spots a robbery in progress and makes a detour to Fire Horse Park, specifically to the Eye of Tranquility, a small lake surrounded by old sinners hoping for salvation, following the tradition of Chiang Taikung, a Taoist who fished without worms. Li Kao wrings a confession about the mushrooms from a toadish fellow named Hsiang. He identifies the manuscript fragment as a Ssu-ma Ch'ien, but an obvious forgery. It has also been traced recently.
The Lady in the Van received positive reviews, with particular praise being aimed at Smith's acting. Rotten Tomatoes gave the film a rating of 89%, based on 149 reviews, with an average rating of 7.21/10. The site's consensus states, "Led by a marvelous performance from Maggie Smith, Lady in the Van wrings poignant, often hilarious insight from its fact-based source material." On Metacritic the film holds a score of 70 out of 100, based on 30 critics, indicating "generally favourable reviews".
The nature of the situation meant that Paige only had two-and-a-half weeks in the rehearsal process before her first performance. She admitted feeling daunted by the prospect, having seen Glenn Close in the role on Broadway just prior to entering rehearsals. London critics were largely won over by Paige in a performance that "not only wrings out every ounce of dramatic action but delivers some unexpected humour as well" and she took over the part full-time the following year.
J'onzz arrives vengeful and wrings D'kay's neck in disgust.Brightest Day #15 (December 2010) J'onzz defeats D'kay by forcing her into the Sun, saved from the same fate by the White Lantern Entity, who informs him that his mission has been accomplished, and returns his life to him. The Entity then tells J'onzz to choose between Mars and Earth. J'onzz chooses Earth and returns to his adopted homeworld only to be absorbed into the earth by the Entity as "part of the plan".
The DownBeat reviewer of Vesper, a collaboration between Gress and the trio expEAR, wrote that the bassist "has exquisite time and a composer's sense of line, a combination that allows him an insightful level of counterpoint in his playing". The DownBeat reviewer of Gress's The Sky inside wrote that he "favors a focused restraint, a sort of concentrated tension that wrings the maximum inspiration from minimal elements, and which maintains a taut severity even when spare free passages burst into angular swing".
Elliot, 145n23. In the following scene, Lusca relays Pearus' challenge to Lidia. Lidia, dressed "sumptuously", then brazenly enters the noisy hall where Decius is holding court, makes an impassioned speech accusing Decius of preferring the hunting grounds to her bedchamber, and grabbing the falcon from its perch, wrings its neck in front of all. Then, laughing, she nuzzles up to Decius and plucks five hairs from his beard, claiming that they were white, making him appear older than he was.
Unbeknownst to the group, a number of powerful figures in the Imperial Court have a vested interest in the fate of Kathana. Seodra, the Court Wizard, and Lytra, the Warlord, want to manipulate Kathana's arrest to gain favor from the Emperor. The Imperial Consort, however, is a friend of Kathana's and wants her protected, as do those who wish her favor. Before setting out, Khaavren's would-be lover Illista, a Phoenix courtier seeking favor, wrings a promise from Khaavren to prevent Kathana from being arrested.
Virginia contacts Neale, and tells him she loves him, but he is still suspicious of her motives. When the hotel desk clerk (Benson Fong) who was there the night Bill was murdered, contradicts Virginia's story, Neale wrings the truth out of her. She was part of the smuggling ring, with her role to get close to the pilots who were flying in and out of Calcutta, until Bill got wise to the scheme. She held a gun to Bill's temple but it was Lasser who strangled him.
The women occupy the centre mid-ground of the painting and are lit from high above the left hand of the canvas, presumably by the moon. The source of light throws shadow inconsistently. Most of the women are huddled together in a row, while some are at the edge of the bank or alone to the right seemingly lost in their own thoughts. In the left foreground the last of Kramskoi's rusalki is emerging from among the reeds, while in the background one of the women wrings out the water from her hair.
As described in a film magazine, Fedora (Frederick), a Russian princess of wealth and beauty and engaged to Count Vladimir Androvitch (Merkyl), vows to bring the murderer of the Count to justice after he is mysteriously slain. She traces the assassin to Paris and poses as a Russian exile. By the practice of her wiles she induces Louis Ipanoff (Austin) to fall in love with and wrings a confession from him. Ipanoff goes to Fedora's house and reveals the truth of her fiance's death, he having discovered Vladimir in Mme.
Gould's controversial thesis was that if the history of life were replayed over again, human level intelligence would prove unlikely to ever arise again. In his review, the biologist Richard Dawkins wrote that, "Wonderful Life is a beautifully written and deeply muddled book. To make unputdownable an intricate, technical account of the anatomies of worms, and other inconspicuous denizens of a half-billion-year- old sea, is a literary tour-de-force. But the theory that Stephen Gould wrings out of his fossils is a sorry mess."Dawkins, Richard (1990).
The dire script wrings every possible cliché out of the situation. The biggest mystery is why this stagey stuff was filmed at all, and why a cast of this calibre should have bothered." Texas Monthly said: "Out of Season cannot be tolerated at any time of year. If ever a project called for an executioner, this was it, and the presence of Redgrave, Robertson, George and the underrated director Alan Bridges, should not fool anyone into thinking that this frail mash note to father-daughter sex is a Certified Art Film.
I would love to see the style throughout their next album, but this is one of my favorites for the year." Kevan Breitinger of CCMCentral optimistically stated "The punk pop genre has been known, let’s face it, to lend itself to sophomoric behavior, repetitive beats, and a notable lack of imagination. But Eleventyseven’s sophomore release, Galactic Conquest, is decidedly un-sophomoric....Eleventyseven wrings as much out of it as anyone else in the mix, often a bit more. Galactic Conquest goes a long way in bringing soul to the genre.
The episode received an approval rating of 80% on the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes based on 10 reviews. The website's critical consensus is, "'Active Measures' wrings some juicy suspense from an impromptu sting chock full of twists and eerily relevant subtext." Shirley Li of Entertainment Weekly' rated the episode a "B+", concluding that it "activated several new mysteries to pursue, and this latest twist leaves me intrigued to see more". Brian Tallerico of New York Magazine rated the episode 3 out of 5 stars, and highlighted the conversation between Keane and Goodman as the best scene of the episode.
Once in Toy City, Eddie regains his full strength and Jack and Dorothy who survived the falling elevator in Area 52 (the other Eddie tried to kill them there) attack the other Eddie. Jack shoots the other Eddie as his identity is revealed when he uses a corroborative noun ("as simple as blinking"). The head chicken, a queen, emerges from the body of the other Eddie and Dorothy wrings her neck and kills her. This is very fortunate because the next queen automatically reverses the previous queen's policies and that is not because she wants to but because of tradition.
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 88% based on 92 reviews, with an average rating of 7.45/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "An effective pairing of period setting and timeless themes, The Nest wrings additional tension out of its unsettling story with an outstanding pair of lead performances." On Metacritic, the film holds a weighted average score of 79 out of 100, based on 25 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". The Nest was screened at the 2020 Deauville American Film Festival where it won the Grand Special Prize, the International Critics' prize and the Revelation Prize.
Author Dean Tudor called the songs on the album "exciting", and wrote that Jennings "finely calculated the art of creating the 'laid back' country sound, and finely complements the forceful, but subdued, instrumentation with vocals that never strain for dramatic effect". Tudor described the album's style as a "blurred" boundary between country and rock and roll. Thom Jurek of Allmusic gave the album three-and-a-half stars and wrote that Jennings' performances offered him in a "deeply expressive terrain" as a vocalist. Jurek also wrote that Jennings "wrings emotion from songs rather than merely projecting them into a microphone".
La Camioneta was well- received critically, with a 100% approval rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes and a score of 83 out of 100 on Metacritic, based on 9 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". Film critics have praised the film as "a brilliant microhistory of our globalized world" often highlighting the surprising payoffs of its conceptual minimalism. Writing for Variety, Andrew Barker stated that "The film wrings an almost bizarre amount of political, humanistic and spiritual substance out of this limited frame. Kendall's eye for untold stories, as well as his instinct for catching evocatively framed images on the fly, mark him as a name to watch".
Redeemer,--Hail! For Thou hast died for me; Thy praise shall never, never fail Throughout eternity! Crown him with crowns of gold, All nations great and small, Crown him, ye martyred saints of old, The Lamb once slain for all; The Lamb once slain for them Who bring their praises now, As jewels for the diadem That girds his sacred brow. Crown him the Son of God Before the worlds began, And ye, who tread where He hath trod, Crown him the Son of Man; Who every grief hath known That wrings the human breast, And takes and bears them for His own, That all in him may rest.
The album received mixed reviews. AllMusic gave Reason 2.5 stars out of 5, with Stephen Thomas Erlewine stating that "[the songs] are colourless and characterless, sounding as if their main goal is to get on pop radio" and that the album "is a real disappointment after the very good, very promising Northern Star". The Guardian gave Reason 2 out of 5 stars, with Alexis Petridis stating that the album "settles on a direction, sounds confident and efficient and wrings the last drops of originality out of Melanie C". In a 2007 interview with The Guardian, Chisholm stated that she thought that the songs on Reason "could have been stronger".
The man who actually carries and hands the drinking cup to the people assembled is termed the tautu'ava ('ava server, also called "soliali'i"). He stands alongside the 'ava bowl and the 'ava mixer, after dipping the strainer into the liquid raises it with both hands and wrings a quantity of the brew into the kava cup held in the right hand of the tautu'ava. The 'ava server then listens carefully for the call from the tufa'ava (distributor) and is thus apprised of the correct individual to be served. Once the name is called, the tautu'ava walks towards the person indicated, keeping his left hand with the palm outwards firmly lodged in the small of his back.
Knowing he will be blamed, he hides the body to throw off those plotting against him. Returning to Carson's apartment, he entraps Kathie (who has impersonated Carson in seeking to ensure that Eels' apartment manager finds the dead man's body) and wrings out of her that she gave Whit a signed affidavit swearing that Jeff killed Fisher. Jeff manages to retrieve the tax papers from some of Sterling's thugs and mails them to a safe location, substituting a local phonebook in the briefcase to throw off Sterling's henchmen when he is captured. He tells them he will only deal with Sterling and flees, only to find him himself the focus of a police dragnet for an accused double murderer.
It is customary for the daughters of all chiefs to be taught how to prepare the 'ava. If the person mixing the 'ava is a young woman, it is customary for her to be the virgin daughter of a chief (matai). The 'ava mixer, sits behind the tanoa bowl and thoroughly mixes the 'ava as another member of the aumaga adds water from time to time. As the mixing proceeds, the 'ava mixer from time to time wrings the liquid from the strainer and folding the same into half its usual length passes it to another member of the aumaga standing outside or near the edge of the house who frees the strainer of the woody particles of the 'ava by several violent flicks.
The remainder of the essay traces the writer's artistic development hand-in-glove with his life story, confirming Wagner's identification of himself as one who wrings Art from Life, i.e. 'masculine', rather than a 'feminine' artistic freeloader. Admitting that with the early Rienzi 'I had it mind only to write an "opera" ', with Der fliegende Holländer 'I became, myself, the artistic modeller of a 'stuff' that lay before me only in the blunt and simple outlines of Folk-Saga'Wagner (1994) 362–3 Gradually, working to the forms of myth as he perceived them, in subsequent operas, Wagner begins to remodel the idea of opera. > 'I by no means set out to destroy [..] the prevailing operatic forms of > aria, duet, &c.
Geoffrey Gilmore, director of the Sundance Film Festival, called the film "a pure delight from start to finish": :If you were impressed watching Oldman play a congressman, wait until you see him do comedy and line dance! With terrific turns by Mary Steenburgen and Radha Mitchell, Utah scenery, hilarious dialogue, and the best joke in a film this side of Something about Mary, Nobody's Baby is a wonderfully entertaining odyssey that should bring Seltzer nothing but accolades. Variety, reviewing the film after its January 21, 2001 premiere at Sundance, described it as "aim[ing] somewhere between Dumb and Dumber and Three Men and a Baby. The film's "witless script wrings few laughs from its retread conceits...What's most toxic, however, is having to watch these actors sweat for their paychecks.
" Tara Brady of The Irish Times wrote of Richardson's performance "the blazing Haley Lu Richardson, wrings everything from her best-written role since The Edge of Seventeen." Ben Nicholson of Sight and Sound magazine considered the auteurist tendencies of the director, Kogonada, which are demonstrated in the film; "It is perhaps unsurprising to those familiar with Kogonada’s acclaimed video-essay work, which often observes the subtle details and recurring motifs of auteurist vision, that his feature debut would be equally meticulous." Sheila O’Malley noted; "What Kogonada has done with 'Columbus' (along with cinematographer Elisha Christian) is to blend the background into the foreground and vice versa, so that you see things through the eyes of the two architecture- obsessed main characters. Watching the film is almost like feeling the muscles in your eyes shift, as you look up from reading a book to stare out at the ocean.
The Vault of Horror story And All Through the House (#35) was adapted to motion picture in Freddie Francis' Tales from the Crypt (1972). The 1973 film The Vault of Horror is titled after this comic, but no stories from this comic were actually adapted for this film. Vault stories were also adapted for the Tales from the Crypt television series that aired on HBO (1989). The following stories were used in the television series: Horror in the Night (Issue #12), Doctor of Horror (#13), Report from the Grave (#15), Fitting Punishment (#16), Werewolf Concerto (#16), Revenge Is the Nuts (#20), The Reluctant Vampire (#20), Dead Wait (#23), Staired in Horror (#23), 99 & 44/100% Pure Horror (#23), Collection Completed (#25), Seance (#25), Half-Way Horrible (#26), People Who Live in Brass Hearses (#27), 'Til Death (#28), Split Personality (#30), Easel Kill Ya (#31), Whirlpool (#32), Strung Along (#33), Let The Punishment Fit The Crime (#33), A Slight Case of Murder (#33), Smoke Wrings (#34), And All Through the House (#35), Beauty Rest (#35), Surprise Party (#37), Top Billing (#39) and The Pit (#40).

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