The choreography is stilted and clumsy and could have been a great deal more imaginative. |
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In rehearsals it came across really well, but during filming it was stilted, it was bad, it was really ham. |
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The 300 year-old half-timbered stilted building in the High Street has been a focal point for the town for many years. |
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The actors bounce around the stage, infusing the occasionally stilted dialogue with raw physicality. |
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I know it is intentional, but I found the angels' stilted movements unnatural. |
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Because of a tradition of teaching English formally through grammar, translation, and literature, spoken usage is often stilted and bookish. |
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I turned off after forty five minutes, bored by the two-dimensional characters and stilted dialogue. |
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What we saw were videos with abrupt transitions, missing footage, stilted narration, and no background music. |
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He was breathy, his voice quavered, he stumbled over words, he was stilted and uncomfortable. |
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The action scenes were cheesily done, preposterous, and stuck together in a stilted fashion. |
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He sat in a stilted hut in a native village, wattled and roofed with the long, triangular woven leaves of trees. |
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In both the English dub and subtitles, the dialogue is a bit wordy and stilted, but it's rarely distracting. |
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Taking a Quaker stewardship view of nature, Douglas loved creatures of the wild, from the low-slung sand crab to the stilted seabird. |
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I know that generally strained and stilted conversations can't really be described as compelling, but this was a unique situation. |
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She will be staying with the Karen people in their stilted houses in the bamboo and teak jungle where there is no electricity. |
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Much of what passes for architectural writing, particularly in academia, is turgid and stilted. |
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Lee overwhelms his female victims with sheer animal magnetism, rather than a combination of stilted attempts at charm and mesmerism. |
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Thereafter we began to shed the plantations and move into rainforest punctuated by stilted kampung houses and jackfruit trees. |
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The scriptwriter's Danish, right, and because they haven't corrected his dialogue a lot of it sounds really stilted and forced and unnatural. |
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The acting in Blackboard is of the stilted, artificial kind that seems so jarring to the modern viewer. |
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Without being stilted or pedantic about it, Sontag sums up the history of stagecraft back to the Elizabethans. |
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And the motion of these characters is positively stilted and looks like marionettes on strings as they bob and nod about. |
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Severely affected birds may have a marked bowing of the tibia, be reluctant to move, and have a stilted gait. |
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I have had a few stilted conversations, feeling a little self-conscious and unsure, but I think with a bit of practice I will improve. |
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Moreover, his public image was balanced somewhere between the effete decadence of a dandy and the stilted manners of an upper-class gentleman. |
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The restaurant guests seem to be a lot of older foreign tourists, so the atmosphere is a little stilted. |
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The graphics in the 2D sections of the game don't look too bad, although some of the animations are pretty stilted. |
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House of the Spirits was stilted and ponderous and written with a poor command of the nuances of English. |
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Populated by some 68 indigenous ethic minorities, its spectacularly rugged countryside is dotted with their villages of stilted huts. |
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In an age of staged, declarative theatre, Stanislavsky's came as a radical response to what was then a stilted performative norm. |
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I topped up her beaker a few times and we made an effort at conversation, but it was forced and stilted. |
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Everyday life currently seems to consist of one long round of awkward, stilted conversations. |
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Some of the dialogue is delivered in a stilted manner, and some of the plot devices a bit forced. |
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The production cries out for a better translation than the uncredited one that veers between stilted and colloquial. |
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The slightly stilted animation and cheesy synthesized pop music are here in all their glory. |
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The intentionally boxy, stilted animation is arresting at first, until one is distracted by the content of the show itself. |
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The lead children don't gel convincingly as a family unit and their performances, on the whole, are stilted. |
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Instead of dying, he thrashes about a bit, then reaches with stilted slowness for his inner breast-pocket. |
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There were long periods with little to no dialogue, and what dialogue there was felt stilted and unnatural. |
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One of the criticisms I've heard is that the language is stilted and unnatural. |
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For example, it is better to avoid stilted official statements in favour of personal messages. |
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These are often written in stilted language that can be tough going, but such an excruciating level of detail is required to get the desired end result, Rivin said. |
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There is something so stilted and mechanical about her recent flights, that one almost believes the poet now labours at a lyric or an epic on the same principle that one constructs a telestich. |
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And, of course, the stilted and angry phone calls between my ex and I about, well, everything, seemed not worth mentioning either. |
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At times the sepulchral pacing and stilted interactions verge on the genteel. |
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Attempts to understand or imagine her inner life tend to be a bit stilted, perhaps because the author is a historian, not a novelist. |
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The dialogue is stilted, terse and bare, like the syncopated sparks of sharpening knives. |
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I hope we will move from the somewhat stilted process of government by summit to more government at working level. |
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They then get a problem with keeping the head up, and they may also walk a bit stilted. |
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This is due to a new stilted construction which, it is hoped, will enable Neumayer III to remain operational for more than 25 years. |
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Another is their stilted gait, which reflects their loyal, but aloof temperament. |
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How could your reviewer let the writer's stilted portrayal go unnoted? |
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The writing is full of exposition and flowery, stilted language that may in fact be historically accurate but in large measure prevents the characters from coming to life. |
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In those days, his stilted style, forced delivery, and wonky timing were virtues, reinforcing our sense of his hypothetically heartwarming kidness. |
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Complete with stilted dialogue and cringe-worthy background music, the whole thing would be laughable were it not so terrifying. |
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As a debate, this was a sideshow, 90 minutes of stilted silliness, an intermission interrupting the real deal. |
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But the stilted dialogue and bizarre narrative conceits pale in comparison with some of the sacrilege being committed here. |
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We cannot merely try to recapture the stilted, inequitable, broken economy we left behind. |
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In the film, the mirrors make for a theatricality that can seem stilted. |
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His voice sounded unnatural and stilted, but I barely noticed as I thought about making out with Dmitri against the rough bark of the tree in the forest. |
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They end up being stilted and politicized, and folks are locked into the positions they already have. |
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If by good you mean the author manages to keep you turning the pages even though his writing is stilted and the characters are like stick figures, then yes, it was good. |
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If the weekend turned out to be a horrible mistake, at least I wouldn't have to endure five hours of strained stilted conversations on the return journey. |
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The show works best when it gives the illusion of spontaneity, but there is the occasional awkward, stilted conversation that is obviously neither natural nor scripted. |
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This stilted comedy of manners lacks a framework around which to dress itself and, subsequently, has the feel and look of a second-rate sketch show to it. |
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He recited the words and managed to keep it from sounding hokey or stilted, and the rest of his speech was genuinely inspiring, not just the usual catch-phrases. |
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There were Victorian songs of stilted enthusiasm for the innocence and clear sunny skies of the new country, hymned in the English art song idiom. |
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While it's immensely clever and very Flaubertian,it's ridiculously stilted and dated, so I added some stuff of my own,'' he says. |
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Starting with oral language can prevent a hypercorrect, stilted, unnatural tone among novice writers. |
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By day we went door to door asking the occupants in our stilted Flemish, or if we knew some French we carried on with whatever language came handy, if they had a room for the soldiers. |
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The flesh of black walnuts was a protein-packed winter food carefully hoarded in tall, stilted buildings. |
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The Council was designed to enable NATO to conduct consultations with partner countries on political and security issues, but many participants complain that EAPC discussions are overly stilted and formal. |
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At the level of political theatre, debates in the European Parliament may be boring and stilted, thanks to the need for simultaneous interpretation. |
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Throughout, the extemporary passages – be it Simcock's workout on Barber Blues, or Dixon's soprano sax shredding on Speak to Me of Home – are far more interesting than the rather stilted writing. |
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Creative restlessness drives him in this picture to flightiness, his Provençal preference for the Baroque to stilted poses and theatrical gestures. |
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It is glorious in its stilted awkwardness, and should be cherished. |
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With their seamless impressions of Thunderbird puppets, Made In Chelsea's stilted woodentops continue to probe the outer limits of bad acting. |
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Even with a knee injury that curtailed his 2013 season and a frustrating series of ailments that stilted progress this year, the 26-year-old returned to the world stage with a win that never seemed in doubt. |
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Their version of Get Lucky and Freak Out, aided by Stevie Wonder and Nile Rogers, sounds just a little bit stilted, but it might have something to do with this particular recording. |
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The patrol stops from time to time as its leader, a fresh-faced corporal from Chicago, engages passers-by, via Dave, the newly coiffed interpreter from Baghdad, in amiably stilted badinage. |
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Am I in for a bookful of stilted English and poetastering, or is this just schoolboy Ojaide? |
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Nevertheless, the general unfamiliarity of 20th-century audiences with Baroque poetry and dramaturgy, which often appear stilted and artificial, has in the past inhibited their appreciation among nonspecialists. |
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Despite the stilted dialogue and a generous grating of cheesiness, Catherine Hardwicke's film is a sprightly romantic yarn. |
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The recreation of the Viking period is very much a game of pageantry and costumery, all of it delivered in a stilted and laboured prose. |
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The result is nothing extraordinary, but feels awkward and stilted. |
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Like Pullman's tomb, Beckett's dialogue is encased in its own concrete, in a stilted, unspontaneous delivery. |
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The first English translation was made by James Harris in 1888, but is somewhat stilted and has not achieved a wide circulation. |
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You may have structural weaknesses, loose ends, stilted scenes, characters who shouldn't be there and some that are missing, thematic inconsistencies or problems you can't even identify but which stop you from moving forward. |
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Milton was disdainful of the university curriculum, which consisted of stilted formal debates conducted in Latin on abstruse topics. |
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The difficulty with avant-garde writers of any generation is that to succeeding generations they can appear rather stilted, self-conscious poseurs or just silly. |
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