It must also be pointed out that when Norton talks rhapsodically about protecting " national treasures, " she is usually talking about the national parks, which under law cannot be touched anyway.
12.
In an interview on Monday, the Swirl brothers, Denny and Kenny Scott, waxed rhapsodically about their love of pop, from the Beatles and Kiss to Jellyfish and Redd Kross to Beck and Imani Coppola.
13.
Chatting in a restaurant in Manhattan, Ms . Witherspoon veered from such pensive asides to moments in which she spoke giddily, even rhapsodically, about life as a fledgling 22-year-old movie star.
14.
This nasty, explosive film whose youthful predators smirk, smoke dope and discuss their girlfriends like pieces of meat makes an instructive contrast to " A Brother, " the rhapsodically sensual first film of Sylvie Verheyde.
15.
With accents of vivid red, yellow or green, the Donut Maker is undeniably attractive and surprisingly contemporary, even if it does not merit " Ode on a Grecian Urn, " as Samuelson rhapsodically suggested.
16.
During a break in the year-end student critiques at his cluttered Fenway office, Hoston speaks rhapsodically of his style of realism, influenced by the naturalism of Rembrandt, Titian, the French Academic School and baroque painting.
17.
"They were going bufff ! . . . bufff ! . . . from side to side, " he said rhapsodically, recreating the motion, " thousands of them making waves, waiting for the breeze.
18.
Emily Bronte's " Wuthering Heights " can't stay away from the movies, a habit that began in earnest in 1939 with the rhapsodically romantic William Wyler film starring Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon as Heathcliff and Cathy.
19.
The movie bursts with rhapsodically dizzy images of nature ( there are moments when the camera literally spins around in the forest ), and the sounds of hunting horns, church bells and peasants chanting crude, rustic folk songs fill the soundtrack.
20.
But translated into movie subtitles, his rhapsodically sensual odes to lovemaking and female body parts, and his celebrations of his own anatomy ( " a gentle leaping jaguar " ) are only slightly more explicit than the Song of Solomon.