Craig Storper's adaptation of Lauran Paine's novel is riddled with cornball dialogue that unfolds in grindingly earnest platitudes. |
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Divested of their high-sounding platitudes, these programs were intended to train the nation's future leaders. |
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Once again, there is no sign of any reaction from the United Nations beyond pious platitudes. |
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Yet it has evolved as the major challenge of our day, demanding responses beyond pious platitudes. |
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But all Wright does is repeat platitudes from his last confab at Brookings. |
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So says The Knife, who, as their name suggests, are not a conventional band content to offer vacuous platitudes served on a diet of mediocrity. |
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But members of the Omagh victims' group are not content with such platitudes. |
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The other two are gratuities, and while one could argue both gratuities and platitudes are pleasantries, that doesn't make one the other. |
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They seek to dissolve all concrete issues of history, politics and economics into the ethereal mists of moral platitudes. |
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McDonnell's yet-to-be-delivered statement opens with self-serving platitudes and praise for the committee. |
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One critic once said that George Eliot was the only English writer who was into sermonising and moral platitudes. |
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Gone are the moral platitudes, and in their place are actual critiques and questions. |
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Its unpleasantness must not be buried in moral and philosophical platitudes. |
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It's pretty much downhill from there, with everyone speaking in moral platitudes and Hanks looking troubled. |
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They should stop playing to the public gallery by mouthing platitudes and begin thinking seriously about the very nature of crime and punishment. |
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Less sensible platitudes are currently issuing from the mouths of our leaders. |
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In a vague echo of '60s counterculture and New Age platitudes, these crusades are likened to the sacred quest for human freedom. |
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As you sidle up close you can hear voices swapping art world gossip, platitudes and dirt on various celebs, institutions and artists. |
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Don't tell me that, as a nation, we can't distinguish courage from stubbornness, philosophy from platitudes, and an empty suit from a full one. |
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The former manager attempted to enounce typical TV platitudes over Rangers' lack of cohesion on Wednesday night's post mortem. |
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Several other speakers delivered generalities and platitudes, many of which ignored the honored president entirely. |
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No slippery politician was going to give me the kind of straight talk I was looking for, but only politicians and platitudes were on offer. |
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He does not patronise. He speaks directly and not in the warmed-over platitudes of his successor. |
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Laid out on the table in front of me were the pious platitudes of Government Ministers responding to the loss of 350 permanent jobs in Donegal. |
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It represents nothing more than banality, platitudes, and outrageous nonsense clumsily conveyed by insipid prose. |
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Those expressions of admiration were not mere dutiful platitudes inspired by the passing of a respected colleague. |
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We must lift our eyes from the misleading and myopic platitudes of our politicians and look to the future. |
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She waits for another useless barrage of platitudes and axioms, but all she catches is the harsh rasp of his breathing. |
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Despite its grab-life-by-the-horns platitudes and sappy ending, this feel-good debut is a lively read. |
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That would include sharp-tongued humor, strong observation, and surprising insights, not platitudes and legalisms. |
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Filled with platitudes and triteness, the speech utterly failed to inject renewed hope at one of the most important stages of the year. |
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Step Into Liquid is a surfing documentary that offers a satisfactory amount of thrills within a tsunami of platitudes and hyperbole. |
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Stone and Parker are unafraid of lampooning both paranoid megalomania and the inane platitudes of Hollywood superstars. |
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Now she mouths all the normal platitudes about how the Real Message of the Gospel is Social Justice. |
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When he says he expects to win, he will likely be speaking out of sincere conviction, not simply mouthing platitudes like many other candidates. |
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Repent, they admonish, and come back to signing agreements and mouthing platitudes. |
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The company quickly reverted to the more standard practice of mouthing platitudes instead of the bald-faced truth. |
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The environment minister is being condemned for mouthing politically correct platitudes. |
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His lyrics are unfailingly clever, turning pliable platitudes into weightier fodder. |
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He never pushed his will on her, didn't slobber over her, filling her ears with cheap platitudes and hollow compliments. |
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He just spouts Marxist platitudes and courts his women in a thoroughly conventional way. |
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On two continents, they incontinently spout platitudes, nonsense, tall tales, or pseudopoetic fantasies. |
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Aside from a few jingoistic platitudes, a bit of narrative hand-waving to set up the slaughter, there's little or no justification for anything. |
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Mr Morrigon's secretary was at her side muttering platitudes about the weather and asking her how many sugars she'd like in her coffee. |
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All you have are pat answers and glib retorts that turn out, on ten seconds' worth of thought, to be mindless platitudes. |
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Hunter's work may refer to the classics but it's far from the platitudes and cliches of your average public monument. |
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He should be forced to face up to his platitudes and obfuscations over the past four years. |
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Here we are coming through the deepest agricultural crisis since the dust bowl and all we are getting from the government is platitudes. |
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Hove's incandescent anger and contempt for the lies and platitudes of the time-serving politicians, opposition as well as government, burns off the page. |
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Here, in one neat package, we have all the liberal platitudes. |
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But this is one issue on which I think incoherence and vacillation, combined with a liberal dose of pious platitudes, are exactly what most people want. |
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Cliched platitudes about derby matches may be easy enough to pick up, but there are still occasional communication difficulties between player and manager. |
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If one is looking for pious platitudes, this is not the place to come. |
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We have more pious language, more platitudes, no clear definition, no consistency, and no clarity for those people who have to work under the Act. |
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Instead of mouthing platitudes about creating just and lasting settlements, we must turn the financial screws on both parties to make them see sense. |
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The statement after the emergency NATO meeting was a toothless collection of platitudes. |
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Verbomania is a virulent disease to which many people have low resistance, and our world of talk is infested with empty words, platitudes, and clichés. |
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Unfortunately, it just renders the delivery dull, and the more pious platitudes a trifle too threadbare and overexposed. |
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But agonised platitudes spoken in Brussels need to be transformed into programmes for encouraging research if the brain drain is ever to be plugged. |
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His speech contained all the usual platitudes and gushiness about colleagues and staff that come with all such speeches. |
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But while leading figures in other sports often speak out on matters that affect their livelihoods, footballers hush up or are airbrushed into meaningless platitudes. |
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That failure could be his Achilles' heel, for whenever he addresses environmental activist groups he offers platitudes, but little promise of action. |
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He declared that he tried to avoid the caricature of a cutter of ribbons and utterer of platitudes. |
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It may be made up of platitudes and a dash of witticism, but it should be flavoured with goodwill and generosity. |
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It really surprises me to get platitudes without having the succinctness that the member for Regina-Qu'Appelle had. |
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The member seems to have repeated the platitudes of the government that the Conservatives are just tough on crime, a slogan without a foundation. |
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The question is: have you the will to do better, or is all the talk mere platitudes and empty words? |
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When we ask them how they plan to protect this industry, all they do is trot out platitudes. |
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As a diplomat, Kerry is duty-bound to describe raw reality in upholstered platitudes. |
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A veritable mine of high-sounding phrases, in addition to the tried-and-true platitudes of yesteryear. |
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Journalists who attend think it safer not to report the boredom and repetitious platitudes of the whole affair. |
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My update hit a nerve with every friend from my age group and I was inundated with platitudes. |
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By virtue of its platitudes, this prevailing air of pan-feminism stifles debate and removes the agency it purports to provide us. |
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These are standard platitudes that can be applied to Ireland in the international media these days. |
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Some are returning with serious injuries and the government only offers platitudes and hollow symbols. |
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We need a little bit more from the soon to be Liberal Prime Minister than just platitudes. |
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Alongside the platitudes, some spoke of the problems that lie behind the averages and become visible if one takes a structured approach. |
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I have heard platitudes about the glory of the equalization program of which we are all in favour. |
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Canadians did not need platitudes, but rather, planning, answers and action during the critical summer period. |
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Listening to this litany of platitudes, I was put in mind, for the second time, of Richard Nixon. |
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I appeal for the stakeholders in the industry to be consulted in a meaningful way, not with platitudes. |
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What I heard was a seemingly endless string of mind-numbing platitudes. |
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But it's such an infuriatingly bland blend of pop-psychology, unironic platitudes and meandering rock, I wouldn't stop at politely sweeping it under the rug. |
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The guy is just sitting on his hands, while mouthing platitudes. |
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They want to use this forum to bring their platitudes to the attention of as wide an audience as possible throughout the world. |
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The text that I am familiar with so far is a work programme which as far as I can see is simply full of platitudes. |
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Where sentencing reform calls for protection this bill offers platitudes, where it calls for clarity it offers confusion and outright hypocrisy. |
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The Prime Minister recently boasted about his publicity scheme, Advantage Canada, which is nothing more than a pamphlet of platitudes. |
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All the right platitudes about environmental sustainability and new opportunities for farmers are being uttered about renewable fuel development in Canada. |
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He dealt largely in platitudes, and since we live in a world of platitudes, much of what he said sticks. |
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It leads the government to in fact evade substantive issues in question period, to deride members who ask serious questions and to offer empty platitudes. |
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Whenever they do speak on those matters, it is only with pious platitudes. |
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Mouthing little platitudes about caring for aboriginal people and then not voting for the amendments the Conservative Party brought forward to support aboriginal people, shows a bit of a contradiction. |
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The standard of debate was rotten, full of old platitudes on one side and new but confected outrage on the other. |
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It is a catalogue of wishes and demands, couched in empty words and platitudes, with repetitions and contradictions, and it cannot be endorsed, even if something can be found in it to please everyone. |
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On El Dorado Rice is reduced to patching together cliches, reaching for laughs with groaner rhymes, and piling on platitudes. |
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We find the usual platitudes of the back and forth between two governments and, of course, investors' rights enshrined in the heart of the agreement. |
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Beyond the platitudes, Merkel is open to reforms to the internal market, to competitiveness, to the bureaucracy and even to some of the institutions. |
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Even Justice's sister, Grace, having run up against a succession of brick walls including a Ghanaian pastor who offers only pious platitudes ends up advising him to go back to Zimbabwe. |
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We cannot take a motion which by and large is a series of platitudes. |
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I like the fact that Corbyn isn't a cookie-cutter career politician, repeating platitudes ad nauseam. |
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There is a risk that words like partnership become mere platitudes of diplomatic intercourse if they are not backed by hard targets and timetables. |
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With all its wishy-washy platitudes and sweeping generalizations, there was a general theme wafting odorously from the ill-conceived ballot. |
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This traditional mindless attitude to Russia, full of empty platitudes, seems to be humiliating because it can be perceived, for example by Russia, as a clinical example of a response by a few hot-headed politicians. |
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What we need in Europe are fewer platitudes, and more attitude. |
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He has no need to lie and offer pious platitudes. |
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What steps will Parliament take to say that if there is going to be a trade agreement with Colombia, there are going to be strong principles, not side agreements, not platitudes about one being too many? |
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Will the government provide resources to ensure that B. C.'s preparation measures are delivered in time, or can Canadians just expect more platitudes from the minister as the Olympic games approach? |
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I am often amazed to learn of apparently sensible people solemnly taking in the soothing platitudes of politicians, whether Republocrat or Demopublican. |
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