Sentence examples for climax point from inspiring English sources

The phrase "climax point" is correct and usable in written English.
It refers to the highest point of tension or excitement in a story or event. Example: The novel's climax point was when the protagonist finally confronts the villain in a dramatic and intense showdown.

Exact(3)

Surprisingly, according to Vijay Mishra, author of Bollywood Cinema: Temples of Desire, "Bollywood entrenches not so much hybridity as cultural absolutism - although in the realm of visual representation, the opposite is the case, as skimpy outfits and bulging bodies are the norm". Mishra points out that Kal Ho Naa Ho uses a marriage ceremony as a climax point (as do many popular Hindi films).

Dressed in the traditional white clothing of Cuban religious ceremonies, he roused the crowd better than almost anyone working the jazz circuit does: he pumped his fist, divided the audience into separate halves of clapping rhythm, even stood on the bench at one climax point and played cluster-chords with his foot.

"Now there's some sort of climax point that hopefully adds to the political symbolism of the project".

Similar(57)

With one hand on the steering wheel, he drove his Jeep along a bumpy dirt trail, down muddy slopes, over fallen trees and then, for a climax, pointed the Liberty toward a rock-strewn river.

The VR tech in both the book and the current Steven Spielberg movie (which, despite resembling the excellent book only in world building and at major climax points, is also not bad) beats anything available on the market today.

Yaoi is a self-derogating acronym derived from the Japanese phrase "yama nashi, ochi nashi, imi nashi" ("no climax, no point, no meaning"), which was coined in the nineteen-eighties to identify sentimental stories about beautiful adolescent boys.

By David Denby At the emotional-erotic climax of "Point Blank," John Boorman's art-conscious thriller from 1967, Angie Dickinson, playing a civilized moll, whacks Lee Marvin across the shoulders and face again and again, and Marvin just stands there, expressionless, his jaw thrust out, until Dickinson runs out of steam.

Among these are the introduction (in which the characters and ideas are established), the establishment of conflict (the problem you are trying to surmount), the climax (the point at which you foresee that problem at its height and how your solution will work even then), and the resolution (how things turn out).

I couldn't work out if the problem was with the editing or the directing, but too often when a scene was reaching its dramatic, horrific climax - the point at which you are thinking about raising a hand to cover your eyes - the tension dissolves like a sneeze that never materialises.

The word "yaoi" is translated as "boy's love" and comes from the phrase Yama nashi, ochi nashi, imi nashi, which means "No climax, no point, no meaning"—a reference to the proliferation of fervid ass-licking and lack of actual plot.

Onstage Mr. Diamond is a slightly muted version of the showman he has always been, belting his songs in a still powerful baritone and punctuating the climaxes by pointing straight up to the rafters.

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