View example sentences and word forms for Reenactments.

Reenactments

Reenactments | Reenactment

Reenactments meaning

plural of reenactment

Example sentences (19)

A straight-to-television film that blends both fictionalized reenactments of Diana's final two months, as well as news footage and interviews, Diana: Last Days of a Princess is highlighted by Genevieve O'Reilly's performance.

He has a YouTube channel called Bitesized Nightmares, in which viewers comment on descriptions of nightmares and Ball uploads reenactments of said descriptions.

His shtick was doing slow-motion reenactments of the action on the field.

Still today, these celebrations continue with Leon County and other areas being home to reenactments of events in the Civil War and the Emancipation Proclamation itself.

Today, tourists can “visit” with soldiers from wars past on the Fort Dobbs State Historic Site, with reenactments and demonstrations during events like the Military Timeline and Winter With the Western Company.

During reenactments, Jennings, 62, is to represent several denominations as a parson.

Those opportunities to make the connection at the reenactments is not lost on him.

He also told the court that his PhD student Yeschenko - with whom he took part in Napoleonic reenactments - had a 'criminal' lover now wanted by Interpol who was seeking to kill him to steal his luxury city flat.

Netflix is currently producing a revival of the show (it premiered on NBC in January 1987) that uses interviews and reenactments to present the details of cases that range from murders and missing persons to unexplained paranormal phenomenons.

They will have a virtual panel discussion, poetry, drummers, reenactments and a children’s book giveaway.

In the series' surprisingly effective reenactments, Coe is played by Emmy Award-winning actor James Cromwell.

Reenactments will take place throughout the day at Fort St Angelo.

The researchers leave to future work improving the landmark transformer to make reenactments even more convincing.

The rituals of staging elaborate crucifixion reenactments (Passion Plays), public self-flagellation displays, and massive silent processions are specifically Mexican, with such events taking place nationwide from Palm Sunday to Easter Day.

Grierson's definition of documentary as "creative treatment of actuality" has gained some acceptance, though it presents philosophical questions about documentaries containing stagings and reenactments.

Meanwhile, humans continue practicing formerly magical rituals through force of habit, reinterpreting them as reenactments of mythical events.

Since Flaherty's time, both staging action and attempting to steer documentary action have come to be considered unethical amongst cinéma vérité purists, because they believe such reenactments deceive the audience.

The cases were either reenactments of real-life cases or cases that were fictionalized altogether.

These festivals often entailed actions beyond simple offerings to the gods, such as reenactments of particular myths or the symbolic destruction of the forces of disorder.