It's a loose string of vignettes, presented at an unemphatic, page-flipping pace by Zemeckis, and establishing Forrest as an accidental emblem of his times.
12.
His manner _ open, genial, unemphatic _ is that of the perfect intellectual host : someone happy _ no, determined _ to freshen everyone's mental glass.
13.
Despite his background in advertising, Bielinsky exhibits an unemphatic filmmaking style that, while employing Buenos Aires locations to their full advantage, rarely draws attention away from the performances.
14.
Their alloverness and actively layered surfaces derive from Abstract Expressionism, notably the work of Jackson Pollock, while their unemphatic but clearly defined grids echo the rigorous formalism of geometric abstraction.
15.
More than a murmur, not quite an incantation, it's a melody for cello _ elegant, velvety _ all rounded vowels and cushioned consonants : an exhalation of unemphatic syllables.
16.
Perhaps this was so because he simply said and wrote what seemed to him to be exact and true, in his own unemphatic, careful prose, with all the qualifications that the truth seemed to demand.
17.
Ronald Harwood, with much undisputed input from the director ) catalogs the horrors, absurdities and day-to-day details of life in the Warsaw Ghetto in an unemphatic, matter-of-fact way.
18.
Peter Maass's profile of Lungren is bloodless and unemphatic, which seems to be George's house style, but that's in keeping with a candidate who appears to have a lot more George Deukmeijian in him than Ronald Reagan.
19.
Berlin's was a lonely voice of restraint and mediation during much of the middle portion of this century, equally opposed to the seductive simplicities of left and right . ( This unemphatic yet devout commitment to liberalism is another element in the reverence with which he was held .)
20.
One of the joys of Tati was his precise use of the camera _ I once described the overall effect as the dry, unemphatic humor of Buster Keaton as directed by Stanley Kubrick _ which is probably why " Mr . Hulot " won the Grand Prix at Cannes in 1953.