picture
(noun)
a visual representation (of an object or scene or person or abstraction) produced on a surface
All clip examples
-
I just couldn't. So I sold some pictures.
(Scarlet Street)
-
You actually sold those pictures? Uhhuh.
(Scarlet Street)
-
Pretending you painted those pictures out of your own head and all the time you were just copying the work of a real artist.
(Scarlet Street)
-
If I'd brought those pictures to a man like Dellarowe he wouldn't have taken them.
(Scarlet Street)
-
She gets 500 dollars for a single picture.
(Scarlet Street)
-
Dellarowe's asking for more pictures...
(Scarlet Street)
-
What difference does it make whose name is on those pictures... yours or mine?
(Scarlet Street)
-
I want to paint your picture, Kitty. How about it?
(Scarlet Street)
-
Janeway says the new pictures are... the best things you've done.
(Scarlet Street)
-
How did my pictures get into Dellarowe's window?
(Scarlet Street)
-
She didn't paint those pictures.
(Scarlet Street)
-
The accused brought me two pictures.
(Scarlet Street)
-
Mr. Marnay, would you autograph this picture of you? Please?
(Love Affair)
-
Being seen with you is news and I don't want to get my picture in the paper, so...
(Love Affair)
-
And all that time, I had a picture in my mind of you and that woman.
(The Last Time I Saw Paris)
-
I have a picture of her in my room.
(The Last Time I Saw Paris)
-
I saw one little picture that cost 50,000 dollars.
(Scarlet Street)
-
You know what, I bet I saw some of your pictures there and didn't know it.
(Scarlet Street)
-
I don't sell my pictures.
(Scarlet Street)
-
I bet you sell your pictures in Europe, France or some place like that.
(Scarlet Street)
-
I bet you get as much for your pictures in France as those Frenchmen get right here in New York.
(Scarlet Street)
-
He's in the big money, isn't he? You said 50,000 a picture, didn't you?
(Scarlet Street)
-
Don't you want to paint my picture?
(Scarlet Street)
-
Sold any pictures lately? No.
(Scarlet Street)
-
Why don't you paint my picture?
(Scarlet Street)
-
How long does it take you to paint a picture?
(Scarlet Street)
-
And all your silly pictures cluttering up the hall...
(Scarlet Street)
-
Would you... Would you like to see my pictures?
(Scarlet Street)
-
Told me he hadn't sold any pictures for a long time...
(Scarlet Street)
-
Well, you say you haven't sold any pictures lately.
(Scarlet Street)
-
The fellow who paints those gets 50 grand for a single picture.
(Scarlet Street)
-
Well he didn't get it from his pictures.
(Scarlet Street)
-
Yipe. They've got pictures there worth a million bucks.
(Scarlet Street)
-
You can't take his pictures to the museum.
(Scarlet Street)
-
I couldn't even give him my pictures. Not for nothing.
(Scarlet Street)
-
Then... you know, it's a hard business selling pictures.
(Scarlet Street)
-
So you gave away two pictures for a couple of dimes and now you can't collect the dimes.
(Scarlet Street)
-
Yeah, I seen your picture in the post office.
(One-Eyed Jacks)
-
But the pictures you brought me.
(Scarlet Street)
-
We'd like to find out who painted the pictures.
(Scarlet Street)
-
How long does it take you to paint a picture?
(Scarlet Street)
-
Say, I hope you don't mind me looking at your picture?
(Scarlet Street)
-
Why'd you buy those pictures if you didn't know who painted them?
(Scarlet Street)
-
Doesn't even put her name on her pictures.
(Scarlet Street)
-
She got the idea her pictures weren't any good.
(Scarlet Street)
-
But the picture...
(The Amazing Mr. X)
-
...Paul's picture.
(The Amazing Mr. X)
-
There's a picture of him in this pamphlet he wrote.
(The Amazing Mr. X)
-
That's really a picture.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
-
My picture? Yes, of course.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
-
I was just going to look at the pictures.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
-
Here's a picture of the guy.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
-
But he had deliberately given me such a sense of guilt and had painted such a picture of what would happen to me...that I was crazy with fear.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
-
I wouldn't have known you, either, Walter. - Only I saw your picture.
(The Strange Love of Martha Ivers)
-
Starlin Cosmetics should have Janice Starlin's picture advertising them.
(The Wasp Woman)
-
It takes very clear pictures. Oh, please, monsieur!
(Love Affair)