Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigExact(1)
Then a truly outrageous sequence: Verdasco looks like he's won it several times but Murray's defensive skills save him and he somehow manages to hook a forehand from right to left which Verdasco, diving, can't get back.
Similar(59)
He referenced one of the film's most outrageous sequences, in which Andre debases himself during a night of debauchery involving prostitutes and drugs, a sequence that culminates in a sexual sight gag far too filthy to be described here.
There's also a seductive woman psychiatrist, an aptly seasonal hint of illicit pregnancy, and one of the most outrageous of all dream sequences, set in uterine pink, depicting the writer in a sequined sailor suit and Susan as a bird in a gilded cage (the dream culminates in her grab for Virgil's long, tall key).
The sequence is as outrageous as it is eerily vaudevillian, and unexpectedly improves upon some of the shortfalls of the original film.
On the night of the video's premiere, Rap-Up complimented Knowles on starting a "dance revolution", her "heavily-choreographed visuals" and "menagerie of wild animals, outrageous fashion, and epic dance sequences".
And the daft train station shootout in "The Untouchables" (1987) was an outrageous extrapolation of the Odessa steps sequence from Eisenstein's "Potemkin".
The sequence of grotesque events is so outrageous that it is almost, but not quite, funny.
Try to have them in a logical sequence and make sure they are not too outrageous for your movie.
After an origin myth sequence set in darkest Peru (incidentally packed with some outrageous campery), our young, ursine hero arrives in England, to be adopted by the Brown family in their west London townhouse.
But there are also forays into the fantastical: The Housesitter features a dream sequence, in which Wilson and Braun meet up in the snow wearing outrageous masks.
In one sequence of 90 pages, albeit with World War II impending, he flings around terms like "nonsense," "madness," "outrageous," "preposterous," "pestilentially," "insane," "mad," "insane" and "mad" again, and "lobotomous".
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com