The writing was excellent, with Verity's sarcastic one-liners to customers simply rolling off the tongue. |
|
Instead he plays it for laughs, as perky one-liners replace probing dialogue. |
|
The narrative is tangential and anecdotal, a linear mosaic of small failures and smaller successes, interspersed with laugh out loud one-liners. |
|
The book is littered with one-liners and anecdotes that will be familiar to activists on the Left. |
|
He will be remembered for his quick wit, his one-liners and his dry sense of humour. |
|
After the initial, attention-grabbing one-liners, each ad went on to explain the benefits of a particular banking service. |
|
But his live show is much more casually cruel, and no matter how sensitive a subject, nothing is taboo for his one-liners. |
|
The script must remain kiddie friendly, as well as laying down witty one-liners for the growns. |
|
Doolittle in My Fair Lady, is back on more familiar ground in this barmy story, littered with Wilde's razor-sharp one-liners. |
|
This fabulously barmy show is littered with Wilde's inimitable razor-sharp hysterical one-liners and a delicious vein of black humour. |
|
Indeed, in the film, there are a lot of brilliant throwaway one-liners about our celeb-obsessed culture. |
|
In what is essentially a string of anecdotes and one-liners, Waterhouse shows off his knowledge of Soho history and myth. |
|
To many in Scotland, Smith is just a comic turn and it's often taken outsiders to recognise her ability to do more than just drop one-liners. |
|
The problem is that the old party is an unconscionable time a-dying, which prompts Kemp to utter outrageous one-liners. |
|
It is undeniable that they cannot be easily summarized or reduced to one-liners. |
|
The one-liners are snappy, the situations volatile and the comic opportunities richly rewarded. |
|
With such scathing one-liners Steers gives his film a hard carapace of irony. |
|
Although I did wonder whether they might have exchanged some witty one-liners. |
|
This becomes a running gag, along with plenty of witty and clever one-liners. |
|
There is a smooth flow of jokes, some nice one-liners, the sort to send the masses giggling away. |
|
|
Instead of long explanatory diatribes on the reason for doing, or being, it spits out witty one-liners that cut the legs off apathy. |
|
There are sight gags a plenty, and some great one-liners and verbal repartee. |
|
He was warm, witty and faced each day armed with a brace of one-liners and a trademark cheeky grin. |
|
This premise sort of sets up many of the one-liners and jokes that permeate the film. |
|
All this is done with a wink and a smile, lots of witty one-liners and a backdrop of upbeat music. |
|
It depends on one-liners and historical in-jokes that take a great deal of energy to follow. |
|
Not just bytes, she is besotted by witty one-liners and mushy expressions, phrases. |
|
Like the violent cinema of China and Japan, there were no quips, no one-liners, no rise in a trumpets or hugs whenever someone died. |
|
The double entendres are all back, from the film's title right down to multiple cheeseball one-liners. |
|
Dialogue is sparse, so the humour is superficial, not character-driven, and shows up as glib one-liners. |
|
As MH, the family nurse practitioner, cleaned and sutured the wound, the patient punctuated the air with Henny Youngman-type one-liners. |
|
He floored budding chess players with his swift one-liners like the lightening fast moves he makes on the board. |
|
He also has a penchant for catchy one-liners, ideally suited to television. |
|
The movie is a veritable mine of in-jokes, strange gags, and funny one-liners. |
|
From cartoons to sitcoms, the stars are now sassy children who deliver flip one-liners, put down authority figures and revel in a laugh track. |
|
The music is just as loud as in the previous films, and the gags and one-liners are more often lame than funny. |
|
I can remember several brilliant one-liners that he used to come out with but none of them are printable. |
|
Much of this is highly entertaining, and the anachronistic one-liners are sometimes wonderful, sometimes effulgently absurd. |
|
The one-liners are as zingfully fresh as only Hollywood's best script doctors can write. |
|
With a stage presence as big as her amazing costumes, her ad-libs and one-liners had the audience in raptures. |
|
|
Always, in the past, you could rely on wicked one-liners and glorious cameo roles. |
|
Dave can see he's on to a winner, so reels off a string of one-liners without a break. |
|
They mix with the crowd telling stories and dropping one-liners to kindle interest and build suspense. |
|
The comedy aspect is a little lame, with too many one-liners, and the movie is hopelessly trapped in the '80s in almost every way. |
|
Yes, it has some amusing dialogue, mostly one-liners, but the humor is that of a professional popgun for hire, an impersonal jokester, rather than an observer of humanity. |
|
And you really do hear some good one-liners from the stand-ups. |
|
Imagine the treasure trove of biting one-liners Maggie Smith would deliver about a relative dating a black man. |
|
The quick-cut trailer suggests a soft-core romp with dramatic intrigue and wry one-liners. |
|
Also back is that impeccable writing, packed with all the weird, wonderful one-liners that fans fell in love with last season. |
|
Yet beneath the gags and one-liners that pepper You Will Meet, a tragicomic pessimism is clearly obvious. |
|
In-depth analysis gets mowed down by the rat-tat-tat of one-liners. |
|
Orange Is the New Black returns to Netflix with a wildly addictive potion of darkness, estrogen, and one-liners. |
|
The one-liners, ungrounded in the best of times, now teeter dangerously close to nastiness. |
|
And it's years since I've heard anyone pile up as many pithy one-liners. |
|
The cast deals admirably with a difficult script which is peppered with acerbic one-liners and wonderfully witty wisecracks, characteristic of Marber's earlier comedy. |
|
She ran the gamut with physical humor and dished out droll, self-deprecating one-liners. |
|
His manner was rather that of a music hall artist, complacent, even cheerful, as his one-liners provoked from his audience the rejoinders he sought. |
|
The script is peppered with hilarious, punchy one-liners and one malicious twist in the plot follows another to keep the momentum swinging nicely. |
|
Equipped with tongue biting one-liners, he is contagiously energetic. |
|
A whole whack of puns, one-liners and double entendres get crammed into the 90-minute running time, and most of them fall flatter than a postage stamp. |
|
|
Burns' dialogue has a natural, unforced rhythm that contains a fair number of wry one-liners that compensate for occasional bouts of triteness and pretentiousness. |
|
The Kiwi was ripping into the Aussie with relish and, following a string of Wombat and Kangaroo one-liners, he began ridiculing the Australian work ethic. |
|
As a result, emails from men tend to be short, and are often one-liners. |
|
Big, on the other hand, smoked cigars, drank Scotch, had the best one-liners and a headful of sleek black hair I was born to run my fingers through. |
|
This has the odd effect of partially neutralising Dafoe's excellent performance, creating a character who is Bugs Bunny-like, capable of partaking in comic one-liners. |
|
In between is again a lot of action and witty one-liners thrown in. |
|
Mamet effortlessly packs his story with one-liners, irony and sharp satire as he warmly ribs his own industry and the people that become caught up in it. |
|
His poker-faced timing makes the most of even mediocre one-liners, and beneath sequoian impassivity lurks an engagingly warm persona. |
|
The cynical, quippy one-liners in tonight's premiere feel a little forced, while other episodes are earnest and straightforward. |
|
Appendix B contains one-liners specifically for Windows, and appendix C is a listing of 130 one-liners and is available online as well. |
|
Be gobsmacked by classic one-liners, rib-tickling gags and comical storytelling. |
|
It delivers slam-bang thrills and a few sparkling one-liners as rivalry between the two intensifies. |
|
The energetic hat enthusiast seems to have as many one-liners as she does chapeaus. |
|
Jokes include popular and original jokes, funny one-liners, knock-knock jokes and silly tongue-twisters. |
|
What do one-liners have to do with gaining a competitive edge in the benefits business? |
|
The action, one-liners, buddy bonding and retro coolness takes this to a new galaxy. |
|
The driller killer's attempts at Kruegeresque one-liners fall pretty flat, although the cast are fairly funny as they run around desperately trying to look scared. |
|
Known for his excitable commentating style and incisive one-liners, the Alnwick-born son of a miner was diagnosed with bowel cancer last September. |
|
You will love his new hits, as he cranks up his joke box once more, unleashing hundreds of his celebrated one-liners, and also some pictures he drew. |
|
Expect an assortment of jokes, stories, observations, ad-libs, one-liners, accents, theories, topical gags and self-deprecation from the laid-back gagsmith. |
|
|
The obvious fart jokes and done-to-death innuendos have led critics to pooh-pooh Mrs Brown, but there are also a wealth of witty one-liners and good old-fashioned slapstick. |
|
There are reasonable one-liners and an engaging bromance, but none of the above excuses the fact even Jean-Claude Van Damme would probably turn his nose up at such dreck. |
|