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"frisson" Definitions
  1. a sudden strong feeling, especially of excitement or fear

295 Sentences With "frisson"

How to use frisson in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "frisson" and check conjugation/comparative form for "frisson". Mastering all the usages of "frisson" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Similar to frisson, the induction may come on fast, but the feeling can continue to linger longer than frisson.
And curiously, other researchers have shown that those who experience frisson also score higher for the personality trait called "openness to experience" than those who don't experience frisson.
"You could feel the frisson amongst the artists," he says.
This theory states that frisson is actually related to fear.
You meet Harriet the Spy with that frisson of recognition.
A frisson of nervousness is still running through the market.
Every frisson, everything that's Alive or that was once aliver.
Neither was going to find that frisson with somebody else.
But none of us can provide the delightful frisson of romance.
It's also possible for ASMR to be experienced alongside frisson, though.
"Frisson involves the spine and the back shivering," Thimo tells me.
George had the means to save r/Frisson and he did.
The Bowery still had this frisson of being a scary place.
It captures the frisson felt in contemplating the act, but resisting it.
Frisson is much more researched and is strongly associated with evocative music.
It doesn't seem sure about what frisson is or what causes it.
"Frisson is the center of my work [and] super important," he said.
I think Frisson is a beautiful thing when you can provoke it.
The mere fact of Ms. Pressley's challenge gives the primary its frisson.
When I play "Night and Day," I still get a little frisson.
It was a journey into the unknown, with a frisson of danger added.
The phrase creates a frisson of excitement among a certain group of people.
But when Maggie is alone with her thoughts, she provides plenty of frisson.
At the same time, Thimo was dismayed with the direction r/Frisson had gone in: he didn't think the subreddit was about frisson anymore, but rather a smattering of links that made the poster feel in one capacity or another.
It provided a better frisson for the audience than just seeing a dead body.
The moves in both debt and equities added a frisson to calm-trading markets.
There's just enough substance there to generate frisson, but not enough to incite action.
Ms. Manning's atypical identity adds a frisson of subversion to her already subversive acts.
The cautious never experience the frisson for which they've paid hundreds of thousands of dollars.
It would have prompted a particular frisson of anxiety for American filmgoers in the 1940s.
It's hard to not feel a frisson of awe at the scale of the feat.
They lent the movie a frisson of sexual tension and a lurking question: What if?
That reluctance for the part creates a mix of disdain and frisson in her performance.
That challenge failed, but it added to a frisson of drama on the convention floor.
Feelings, colors and sounds sear and blaze, and death delivers the same frisson as sex.
And besides, it was the frisson of name-checking Hitler that counted for the audience.
There was the frisson of the illicit, the threat of potential demons lurking in every corner.
You stand before a famous painting, feel that frisson of recognition, Instagram it, and move on.
In spite of Richter's protests, it is part of what gives his photo portraits their frisson.
This gives the movie an extra frisson, adding to its portrait of a self-destructive woman.
That's what makes it difficult to control and monetize, but also what gives it its frisson.
It generated the kind of frisson that a parade of clothes might not in itself provide.
I also wanted the frisson of flirtation and the thrill of seduction, without the follow-through.
Or even experienced an illicit frisson of suspense over the setting of this year's doomsday clock.
Ms. Ilich remembers feeling an instant, undeniable frisson of attraction to the "tall, dark and handsome" climber.
That's a boundary you have to be aware of, and doesn't it add to the frisson anyway?
That last one goes to a celebrity, who gives the whole thing a frisson of paparazzi pizazz.
And so it is the frisson-makers — history's backstage players — whom we writers love best of all.
The more strenuous the Soviet efforts to suppress a work, the greater its frisson of the forbidden.
But is once a week truly, really, the best way to keep the frisson in your life?
Whether or not you believe in psychic phenomena, this procession of vengeful women offers a frisson of fear.
I just wanted to make experimental, abstract, esoteric, abstruse art, game-changing transcendent work of viscera, and frisson.
A near-disaster involving an errant flame and a feathered cuff only added a frisson to the evening.
The most well-developed theory about music-induced frisson comes from a music cognitive psychologist named David Huron.
Reddit and the current r/Frisson moderators didn't comment on how exactly they regained control of the subreddit.
Pornography, broadly conceived, is also designed to produce a measurable response in the body—arousal, disgust, amusement. Frisson.
Then Facebook came along, with all the frisson of "only college students use it," and we drifted there.
But it's an enjoyable one, if you like fine wine, beautiful countrysides, and a little frisson of flirtation.
The chef is shown constantly tasting in segments that will send a frisson of delight to foodie-voyeurs.
It's hard to know exactly if they are with us or against us, which creates some existential frisson.
Beating up on "the American Dream," which is now ebbing everywhere, lacks the frisson that it once had.
Anyone who saw them live will recall the frisson produced by such young women in such sophisticated designs.
"I wouldn't be me if I didn't feel a little frisson of excitement at being late," Romeo said.
Adding extra frisson: The director of "Spotlight," Tom McCarthy, was introduced by one of the film's stars, Rachel McAdams.
Her preoccupation is with color and the optical frisson she can attain through her intuitive use of geometric organization.
In taxonomising the responses music elicits, Mr Gasser identifies the peak high as "frisson", characterised by "thrills and chills".
We identify with our favorites, getting a frisson of pleasure from their perseverance against tall odds and difficult antagonists.
This creates an interesting frisson within an exhibition that is both masterly and radical, traditional in feel yet subversive.
Celebrity sightings were given extra frisson thanks to instant messaging and Gawker humor redefined the language of service journalism.
Frisson, the French word for shivers, "is similar to ASMR, which is when your head tingles," Thimo told me.
But without the frisson of shame, Uncanny Valley would be a completely different book, and not nearly as good.
Even among white liberal friends, I've noticed that merely saying the words "white people" causes a frisson of discomfort.
There was no sign of this actually happening; the mere suggestion that it might was enough to cause a frisson.
Celebrity endorsements are nothing new, but the cross-pollination between streetwear and high fashion is being accelerated by this frisson.
But it was also shot in dug-out trenches, with mud and dirt that give it a frisson of reality.
The nervous-making frisson these photographs set off when they first began to appear in 1960 can still be felt.
In "The Sparsholt Affair," the fun and the frisson for which Hollinghurst is so rightly known have been dutifully faded.
To an outsider, r/Frisson is a subreddit about nothing in particular: a mishmash of songs, pictures, text, and videos.
What is frisson if both a New Yorker article about Megan Phelps-Roper and Aerosmith's "Dream On" can provoke it?
Each individual shot creates a frisson of desolation that resonates far beyond the facile irony suggested by the movie's title.
Beyond the railing, water (ocean, sea or lake) surges and, with a bird, gives the image a frisson of drama.
Wonderfully, the bubbles look the way we sometimes feel — that prickly frisson — when we sense we are accessing the uncanny.
I assume no such trees exist, which lent this shirt a frisson of surrealism lacking in most of the store.
Thus we needed books to give us that inner look, that frisson of discovery that we are missing in real life.
This is how the big riches in software are often made, too, so there's a concomitant frisson of power and wealth.
It combines the musical cues that are linked to frisson with the physical cues that may well be linked to ASMR.
Music can cause frisson—"a sudden strong feeling of excitement or fear; a thrill"—which can sometimes be mistaken for ASMR.
Thimo handing over moderatorship to George looked suspicious from the start, especially because George wasn't an active member of r/Frisson.
Against this weighty backdrop, during that first winter weekend the two developed an arguable bond but with no frisson of romance.
This feeling, common to many Jane-ites of my acquaintance, is a reactionary frisson, not a real step away from liberalism.
A frisson of irritation is detectable from some governments that the French and Germans have tried to stitch things up between themselves.
Every cartoon fascist idea he's floated, like banning Muslim immigrants, will take on a fresh frisson of horror for being newly plausible.
It has a charge in our collective imagination, too—producing a kind of frisson from being almost unacceptable, almost over the line.
Boy and girl from different circumstances meet, feel the beautiful frisson of attraction, and manage to overcome the odds to be together.
Spying is about lying, but spy fiction by real-life insiders always arrives with a particular frisson: the tantalizing promise of truth.
All those years later, Paisley perhaps felt a similar frisson of excitement and relief at the final whistle at the Stadio Olimpico.
I look forward to more research being done on the association between ASMR and music, and the differences between ASMR and frisson.
When the viewer tips them the model's vibrator vibrates, adding a frisson of interactivity to what is usually a one-way street.
It might sound like an insignificant subject matter, but r/Frisson has over 0003,2000 subscribers, making it the 2100th most subscribed subreddit.
I've seen lots of technology over the years, and nothing quite replicated the strange frisson associated with plugging into a quantum computer.
There is a frisson of delight in seeing a biracial hero dominate a superhero movie and, in Abdul-Mateen, his black foe.
Each person who does it feels a frisson of originality but unknowingly reveals something that was latent in the stairwell all along.
Kate Erbland, IndieWire: Even visits to the Ministry of Magic come with the special frisson of discovery relished in the "Harry Potter" films.
Having everybody on the same page could mean that everything that's to come will play with an extra frisson of excitement and adventure.
A $5,000 watch can be justified if every time you pick it up or wind its mechanism, you get a frisson of joy.
For some people, the thrill of being watched or knowing that someone could catch you at any moment adds extra frisson to sex.
All we can say for sure is that r/Frisson currently has seven moderators, and that neither of them are George or Thimo.
"The Paris Diversion" provides an unearned frisson from the fact that its sections are named for Paris's most famous places, with accompanying photos.
A city of glorious but tattered beauty, known for its vibrancy and, yes, a frisson of menace, Naples is now humming with visitors.
Even unquestionably innocuous activity, like me unlocking my own door, is lent the frisson of danger thanks to the security-camera-style footage.
That's true in James Gray's "Ad Astra," where the patriarchy threatens the world's existence, giving this science-fiction film a grim documentary frisson.
In their preface, the translators say that the obscenity is intended to give readers a "frisson" such as the original might have elicited.
The titles I chose were not so much intended to frame my intellectual landscape as to provide a frisson or engender a laugh.
And her relatively new life as a very public figure, thanks to relationships with Cara Delevingne and Kristen Stewart, gives it an extra frisson.
What gives "Furious Hours" its frisson is that the author who hoped to follow in Capote's footsteps was his old friend, Harper Lee (pictured).
A subplot involving the mysterious disappearance of Howard's teen daughter adds a frisson of dread that's strategically leveraged to catalyze the characters' conclusive confrontation.
The technical term for this sensation, which often comes with goosebumps, is the French word "frisson," which means "aesthetic chills," according to The Conversation.
When the authority of a great power ebbs, and the tectonic plates of the global order shift, there is always a frisson of danger.
Well, because ASMR closely resembles frisson, some scientists believe it might be set off the same way, but with a different initial fear cue.
After all, as you can see in how the r/Frisson transaction went down, it's a pretty easy deal to make behind closed doors.
For us, it's part of the fun, like the insidery frisson of hearing nuggets of spy jargon hissed by unsmiling people in dark suits.
Surprisingly, Mr. Darnton never felt scared; he found that the "cat-and-mouse game of getting around censors" gave him a frisson of thrill.
Wheels IT'S common practice for companies to inject new products with a frisson of dare by naming them for gutsy pursuits or enticing destinations.
" She began writing about Acker "through the distance, but with this incredible frisson of feeling that often I could write 'I' instead of 'she.
Unlike other trends percolating today — dad sneakers, kitten heels, naked sandals — there's nothing intimidating about it, no frisson of risk or potential for offense.
Take Black Friday: a secular festival invented in the 1950s to inject a much-needed frisson of grotesque, pointless acquisitiveness to the Thanksgiving holiday.
She decided not to speculate about what he was going to say, but she felt a frisson of excitement and nervousness when her phone rang.
He's a couple of years into married life, which imbues songs about being lonely while in love, like "House of Memories," with an intriguing frisson.
Usually it's accompanied by an expectant glint in the eye, a visible frisson at the possibility the questioner is in the presence of supermarket royalty.
There was a frisson of excitement, of suddenly feeling wanted, of not particularly caring who the boy was, but just that they wanted me. Me!
A report in March that Amazon was in talks with JPMorgan Chase to offer its customers bank accounts sent a frisson through the banking world.
Women probably feel a slight frisson, because for women in the workplace, "who lives, who dies, who tells your story" is largely up to men.
But will the frisson around Gervais's return prompt the Oscars to name their own host, or will the show go another year without an M.C.?
As at the men's pond, there was a frisson from being where you maybe shouldn't be; not quite of transgressing rules, but of their irrelevance.
Mr. Bieber's earlier collaborations with Diplo (and also Skrillex) worked because of the frisson of the young pop star getting tugged onto the producers' turf.
But tonight for the first time they were in New York City, where mixed martial arts is newly legalized, adding an extra frisson of excitement.
Frisson is mostly associated with "chills" (probably over 90 percent) but ASMR is more associated with "brain tingles" (more than 90 percent in our research).
It wasn't copying, or even pastiche, but there is a distinct, discernible connection — a shared sense of color and shape, a frisson of bad taste.
The real frisson comes when you move the Murphy bed in the other direction, tucking away the retractable legs, shoving it up into its frame.
When Amazon announced, this week, a new screen-enabled Echo, and a feature to let Echos act as phones, I experienced another frisson of possibility.
The fans will toy with it, play with it, allude to it, as if in doing so they are indulging a little frisson of danger.
There's a certain delicious frisson to seeing your suspicions bear out, as long as the road you're taking isn't dull, which today's grid certainly isn't.
But the stillborn boy, mentioned so prominently (he has no name, but he does have a birth date), adds the frisson of might have been.
Much of the slyest humor here — including the sexual frisson elicited by handcuffing our adversarial hero and heroine to each other — comes directly from Hitchcock's movie.
I don't care about you until you have that sort of frisson of famousness, and that sounds terrible, but I just mean from a work perspective.
When he poked the second across the line after a flailing clearance by Germany goalkeeper Manuel Neuer, a frisson of unadulterated euphoria pulsed through the stands.
There aren't many characters besides Chloé and the twins, which adds to the frisson late in the movie when the great Jacqueline Bisset makes her entrance.
The mystery surrounding Landon's death is only fitting for a writer whose success depended on the frisson obtained from living in the buzzing interstices between extremes.
There could even be several variations of the wall, each of which could give him a new frisson of excitement, and us surcease from his mania.
Kurt Russell shows up as a man in black with a newbie played by Scott Eastwood, whose resemblance to Big Daddy Clint adds intertextual genre frisson.
But on one occasion, the producers very deliberately manufactured a faux-gay frisson between the infamous "Brokeback Bachelors" — Clint and JJ — on Kaitlyn Bristowe's season, in 2015.
It has been a dismal few months for the global economy with the trade conflict sending a frisson through markets and chilling business activity across the world.
Confronting these cinematic horrors allows us to share a benign frisson of fear, secure in the knowledge that when the lights come up, we'll emerge into normalcy.
Louvre executives have requested its inclusion and still hope it will arrive for the show, giving an extra frisson of interest in the runup to its opening.
This month, the band releases "South of Reality," its second album; both records feature exacting, if not militaristic, deployments of whimsy, with a frisson of psychedelic Beatles.
Yes. Our research shows that only about 40 percent feel "chills" with their ASMR, but that does give some validity to potential overlap between ASMR and frisson.
But even a distracting, unnerving, and yes, life-ruining crush is delicious: You might feel a frisson of desperation or disgust, but at least you feel alive.
I remember them because twins always caused a special frisson on majorette dance lines, even before Raeven and RaeAna Hall danced with the Dancing Dolls back in 2007.
And that's how their affair starts: the affair everyone wrote about with a frisson of pop culture glee when The Princess Diarist came out a few weeks ago.
I'm not against Gay Lib and all that, of course, William, but it has taken a lot of the fun out of it, a lot of the frisson .
If you take a look at r/Frisson today—now that Thimo no longer moderates—you'll find a mishmash of music, comics, illustrations, and videos of political speeches.
This torrent of information was pleasing to the human brain as the pleasure centers lit up and the frisson of FOMO led us to refresh page after page.
The result is similar to that achieved by an archaeological dig into a pint of long-forgotten vanilla-bean Häagen-Dazs, except with a frisson of unpasteurized danger.
The pledge sent a frisson of excitement through researchers and philanthropic organizations focused on malaria, a disease that remains one of the top killers of children around the world.
The way you, as fans, can ultimately determine the success of your favorites, which brings on that frisson of electric thrill which no other form of live entertainment provides.
These are the bare facts of the case, and they have been enough to generate a frisson in the American audience that has buzzed, undimmed, to the present day.
"Black Markets" has the usual mix: the frisson of danger, the sheen of immediacy, the claims of injustice, the tinge of sentimentalism, the scarcity of hard information or attribution.
Frisson is an immediate and short-lived emotional sensation usually accompanied by chills, and these chills are almost the same as the chills due to a slight cold wind.
For the rest of us, though, it is only when hints of the uncanny intrude that we feel the frisson of lived experience that Ms. Ruhl, channeling Ovid, wants.
While North Korea's small arsenal of working nuclear warheads injects a particular frisson of danger, in other respects it may be Washington's confrontation with Tehran that is more dangerous.
Yet for all their delights, the works on paper lack the frisson of his paintings, where Goldberg combines opposing impulses and holds them together with the force of his will.
Passengers are treated to magnificent views of the English Channel—and occasionally to a frisson, when rough seas break on the concrete groynes and envelop oncoming trains in sea spray.
The abandoned factory buildings, cheap living space and the frisson of sitting on a cultural front line between Russia and the West will attract trendsetters—or so Estonian officials hope.
In the same way that we enjoy horror movies because they offer risk-free scares, frisson offers us a safe outlet to experience extreme feelings of joy, loss, and inspiration.
According to Thimo, somebody reported his deal with George to Reddit and Reddit shadowbanned both of them from r/Frisson, meaning they can look at the site but not post.
There is also a crepuscular LED display of Britain's national power grid; watching the lights go out across the island gives a frisson of the Brexit-induced ruin to come.
What I Saw GAZA — A nervous frisson ran through the crowd as it pushed toward the fence between Gaza and Israel on Sunday evening, halting 75 feet from the wire.
Her erotic frisson has an idea attached to it as well: is it possible that the world could be her (edible) oyster if she and Sweeney went into business together?
Those who rode the Orient Express, from Paris to Istanbul, could feel a part of elegant old Europe, with a homicidal frisson of Agatha Christie lurking in the next car.
I remember spending a great evening with my best friend picking the first film apart over Indian food, even as I secretly filed away certain scenes with a frisson of transgression.
The area of water could be bigger (it's not for lane swimming), but discovering the pool's halo of color behind a maze of tall green plants provides a frisson of excitement.
Particularly strong were Aja, who leapt from a platform into a frisson-inducing death-drop; Shangela, who lip-synced and danced with verve; and Trixie, who sang and played the autoharp.
When Amar Ramasar (the Baron) laid hands on the upper arms of Sara Mearns (the Coquette) in "La Sonnambula," she responded with a keen frisson that spoke volumes about their relationship.
The sheer frisson that comes with moviegoing still remains with me — and, I would wager, still exists for a lot of people, even those jaded by watching videos on their cellphones.
This means that such punishments generally come with a heady frisson of anxiety and horror, and inspire a strange and morbid fascination in those watching on from the sidelines and the stands.
The folksy tale of Jet Route 80 and the stark looks of the watch and app add a frisson of utility to a timepiece that is at once well-built and affordable.
Meanwhile scooter invasions are illegal in some places and, where they are possible, are fast inviting public and regulatory frisson and friction — by contributing to congestion and peril on already crowded pavements.
The Democratic sit-in over gun-control legislation, captured mainly by House members' smartphone video, had all the elements: emotion, chaos, conflict, life-or-death stakes and the frisson of unpredictable reality.
Music-induced frisson refers to the pleasurable chills that some people may experience while listening to a song, like the goosebumps or shivers that Billie fans often describe getting from her music.
There, she met a gorgeous man, and though he spoke only Greek to her, it was clear from their frisson and the way he touched her arm how the night could go.
"Blondel's delicate but suspenseful sentences exploit the shared erotic frisson of their renewed acquaintance to investigate how much of ourselves we are really willing to unveil," Ayten Tartici writes in her review.
Even as she luxuriates in the forbidden frisson of the affair, she plays Whack-a-Mole with feelings of jealousy, guilt and a sense that this is not going to end well.
It's precisely that frisson of unpredictability that was keeping me sharp during our interview as the subzero air was thickening the blood at the back of my head and slowing my thinking.
Like the living busts in Mombi's collection, the people in these GIFs have no say in how they'll be used, which gives the images a haunting power, a frisson of ghostly possession.
The voyeuristic frisson thus obtained seems to have outclassed the thrill of generating a news report of a SWAT raid on a celebrity's home, an approach that was more common in years past.
Frisson can come in the form of a tragic image, a moving story, or a speech — the point is that it makes you feel something you don't usually feel in your everyday life.
Anyone who's halfway decent on Twitter lives in constant fear of saying something wrong, and the frisson of danger, the flirtation with getting fired, is both the peril and the promise of Twitter.
Most notably, teams from different leagues did not play one another in the regular season, adding a frisson to the rare times they did, like the All-Star Game and the World Series.
At the Commanding Officer's House, the poignancy of this gains a frisson of history — the ghosts of our American past that we keep trying to leave behind, and that painfully haunt us still.
Mr. Verbinski doesn't so much observe shiny surfaces and opulent furnishings as caress them, sending a frisson of visual delight through his camera as it glides down corridors and soars over wooded glades.
But among some of us who've followed and studied all this, one can't help feeling a sort of small frisson, if you like, of consciousness that there is a historical reckoning taking place.
I think back to the frisson of excitement that used to come with getting film pictures processed, receiving exam results, or just going to an entirely foreign place in the days before Google Maps.
While the air of corporate party planning within the stadium seemed rather incongruous with Upton Park's traditional frisson of rage, frustration and East End ardour, events outside the stadium defined much of the evening.
The frisson evaporates, and the game becomes more like church: a profoundly alienating activity where the suspicion that everyone is faking it vies with the fear that everyone is more into it than you.
It was an understandable response: The frisson that came from seeing, in real life, the same building where poor Andrea met her maker in the Season 22014 finale of "The Walking Dead," was delightful.
To feel that creative energy pulsing through this grand exhibition is to be rewarded with a special frisson of a reminder of how alluring that force can be to art-maker and viewer alike.
All that counts are acquisitive instinct, walls and bans (of the kind that keep mother and son apart), displays of power, and the frisson of selective cruelty that lay behind his successful TV show.
However, the United States is a flag-heavy culture, and we may have some awkwardness or frisson about the idea of a formalized ceremony for burning one (what does one wear to a flag funeral?).
It was more like performance art than documentary, although with the added frisson that all this was not only making a claim to reality but was a record of participation in the construction of reality.
The problem is that "Better Call Saul" invites the comparison because the tone and plot of the show occasionally flirt with the atmosphere of dread and danger that gave "Breaking Bad" its very particular frisson.
" On their mental health More recently, he responded angrily to another Times columnist, Maureen Dowd, who suggested during an interview on CNN that Trump "thought the violence (at his rallies) added a frisson of excitement.
The intentionally created divide between the two, which plays itself out night after night on their massive, globetrotting tours, is still, somehow, thirty years on, genuinely exciting, giving their records an amazing kind of frisson.
ASMR is less researched so the understanding has less of a firm foundation, but the minimal research and maximal anecdotes has painted an evolving picture of how ASMR is different from and similar to frisson.
Since then, he has reinvented himself as an auteur's muse, eager to add his mischievous spirit and pop cultural frisson to art-house films by directors like Claire Denis, David Cronenberg, and the Safdie brothers.
In the theater world, reports about this were greeted with a derisive frisson (one website reported, inaccurately, that Trujillo was being brought in to clean up a mess and that Robbins's choreography was being restored).
One crucial win "La La" missed was the top Screen Actors Guild Award, an Oscar bellwether that went instead to "Hidden Figures," adding a measure of frisson to a race that's all but sewn up.
On the pulp side, there was 1975's Ilsa: She Wolf of the SS, one of so many "Nazisploitation" movies that treated the Holocaust as Eli Roth-style torture porn, complete with a sexual frisson.
For his part, Zach has transformed the entire upstairs of the U-HAUL space into a psychiatrist's office, where he'll be conducting interviews by appointment which will culminate in a published oral history, Fear/Frisson.
These eight-figure prizes have attracted the eye of mainstream media, and Dota made it to the front page of The New York Times after TI4, but the frisson of popular excitement never seems to last.
An extra frisson arises because most of the cash seems to have been spent on a digital-marketing firm linked to Cambridge Analytica, the political-research group that is in the news for misusing Facebook data.
Mr Norman proves a deft hand at evoking postwar Liverpool, the Goons, the Cavern, the many faces of the Beatles' prehistory, the St. Peter's Church fête that witnessed the frisson of John and Paul's first encounter.
You can view this longer cut of Terrence Malick's meditation on creation and evolution with a live orchestra, whose performance of the soundtrack's snatches of Mahler, Beethoven and Bach should give the screening some added frisson.
Drawing equal devotion, from an indoor audience in a converted dance hall, was Lana del Rey, cooing through her hymns of vulnerability and obsession, who sent a frisson through her fans whenever she rephrased a melody.
This context, the fact that the creators of this aggressively pointless gadget are emblematic figures in the ascendancy of machines over our contemporary world, lends a frisson of historical oddity to what is essentially an executive toy.
But for devotees of celebrity journalism — the kind of work that aims to add context and depth to the fame economy, and which is predicated on the productive frisson between an interviewer and interviewee — this portends catastrophe.
The Playboy Club seems part of an obvious effort to rebrand — Ms. Levinson prefers language like "evolve" — Playboy into a more generic luxury property that honors its history but makes its cotton-tailed frisson available to all.
Even with the benefit of two Oscar winners in a usually surefire genre, and the frisson of a romance between the director and the leading lady, "Mother!" underperformed its modest box office estimates after opening Sept. 15.
And if that were to change, if any old Muggle could suddenly be trained in magic, the whole thrill of Harry Potter's acceptance at Hogwarts would lose its narrative frisson, its admission-to-the-inner-circle thrill.
Seekers of Presidential frisson cherish the synchronous deaths of Thomas Jefferson and John Adams, on July 21984, 1826, a temporal thrill doubled by the date's being the fiftieth anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence.
What gives this scene its added frisson is knowing from "Breaking Bad" that the death match between Salamanca and Fring will be won by Salamanca, though only by committing suicide at the same moment he commits homicide.
These media representations have set up both our expectations of what sexbots should look like (undeniably hot, recognizably human, and typically female) as well as what our reactions should be (an erotic frisson of fear and curiosity).
Clothes that you can wear to bike to work, to meetings with bosses, and then out for dinner check off boxes for convenience and simplicity, sure, but they also give adherents a covert frisson of in-group coolness.
Mr. Holdsworth caused a frisson among some of the faithful in January when he permitted a reading from the Quran during a service that included a rebuttal of the Christian belief that Jesus was the son of God.
The Irishman said that he admires Mr. Rockwell because, while he is "the loveliest, nicest guy I've worked with, so smart and generous and a joy to be around," he brings a "frisson of danger" to his performances.
Lisa captures her father's mystique, the frisson she felt from seeing his picture in magazines, the effect of dropping his name and the way he created the impression that knowing him was a privilege — albeit a dangerous one.
Ancient legends impart a pleasing frisson to his sleuthing ("I had warned you about walking through the salt marshes at night or early in the morning"), and he learns that this mineral isn't as ordinary as it seems.
In this scene, we see Geralt and Yennefer getting spicy when they're meant to be at a wake, which already adds a layer of quickie frisson that makes things seem a little naughtier than just a regular smooch-sesh.
A second Bulgarian candidate, also a woman, but with a rosier reputation as a punchy ex-dissident than her ex-communist compatriot, caused a momentary frisson of gamblers' excitement by throwing her fur cap into the ring at the last minute.
Was that a frisson of tension that ran through the audience at the start of Friday's concert at the Bohemian National Hall when the composer Georg Friedrich Haas took the microphone and said he had an "uncomfortable announcement" to make?
Sharon Butler strikes me as this sort of intellectually curious painter: not having made up her mind, not falling into any one camp, but enjoying the restless frisson of not knowing where she's going, while being pulled in contradictory directions.
"Because the genre that Miles is aping applies fiction's methods to real-life stories, 'Anatomy of a Miracle' offers the Victor-Victoria frisson of watching a novel impersonate a work of journalism impersonating a novel," our reviewer, Christopher Beha, writes.
The shooting brought a frisson of outrage to Dothan, but it never gained the momentum of later deaths of black men at the hands of the police, like those of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., or Eric Garner on Staten Island.
But the flip side to the shame you describe is defiance, and it's that transgressive frisson — the thrill that comes from the knowledge that you're not supposed to be enjoying movies like this, let alone making them — that is missing today.
Allowing Mr. Navalny to compete in March might help Mr. Putin solve one of his biggest problems: how to turn an election that promises to be little more than a tedious coronation into a contest with a frisson of excitement.
Sometimes, that allows the company to find undiscovered, exciting new talent (as with Stranger Things' Duffer brothers), but it mostly results in lots of deals like the Rhimes pact, in which an established talent arrives to offer Netflix a frisson of legitimacy.
But it can't quite evoke the Sixteen Candles–like satisfaction of an idealized Jake Ryan finally getting together with a nerdy Molly Ringwald, because two perfectly popular, conventionally hot kids making out just doesn't provide the same frisson of high school hierarchies shattering.
That month there was a frisson of excitement in India's business press when the market capitalisation of the manufacturer's parent company, Eicher Motors, briefly overtook that of Harley-Davidson, an equally admired American bike brand, having already surpassed it by sales volume.
The building was zoned for commercial use, and Tom and Heisler hadn't bothered with city permits, and so for me, at least, there was a frisson of illegality to the hidden apartment that Tom was building behind the photo studio's south wall.
The unsatisfied, atavistic part of ourselves that harbors a dim memory of those wondrous nights in the village square experiences a special frisson, a jolt of recognition and excitement, when we witness the work of players who seem loyal to one another.
"Isabel Sarli squeezes more sexual frisson into the space between breathing in and breathing out than most of us could spread over a lifetime of ordinary lovemaking," Roger Greenspun wrote in The New York Times in his review of "Fuego" in 19533.
It's impossible to solve one while on end-of-year autopilot (or with a hangover!) and you're bound to feel a frisson of satisfaction when figuring out a particularly clever entry, and a little admiration for its constructor, all positive vibes for 2017.
When he was younger, there'd been a passionate frisson between boys like him and certain middle-class girls; those girls had woken up to sex when the boys of their own sort were still playing Monopoly or practicing wheelies on their BMX bikes.
The frisson of danger dissipated, however, when it became evident that the opera, like the novel, inhabits a world of make-believe, in which the magical power of music melts the hearts of terrorists and fosters bonds of affection, even of love.
Cannes also saw a political frisson of its own when Cambridge Analytica founder Alexander Nix was forced to cancel an appearance at the conference, while climate action group Extinction Rebellion protested on Facebook's private beach area and at the Palais, where 14 arrests were made.
In an exciting bit of pre-debate frisson, journalists covering the presidential debate at Hofstra University are now Tweet they have to pay $200 for Wi-Fi access on site and, more importantly, the ones who have paid now have no Internet at all.
And how different their work was from John Galliano and Alexander McQueen, arch romanticist and renegade rebel respectively, whose clothes spectacularly revived the two French fashion houses Dior and Givenchy, adding fresh blood and a frisson of anarchy to the staid sphere of haute couture.
"For a while it was kind of cool, it was a good sister subreddit to ASMR," Thimo said, but as he became less involved in posting links to music that made him feel that elusive sense of frisson, the Reddit became clouded with random posts.
Even for a woman who was once a girl like them — I, too, practiced kissing the back of my hand when my mouth was jammed with wires and rubber bands — there can be a frisson of anxiety to actually seeing their private moments revealed onscreen.
Since Kimmel already hosts a nighttime show on ABC five times a week, his Oscar stint had no special frisson, yet the network consistently overlooked his uninspired stewardship as it searched for a scapegoat to pin those falling ratings to, instead blaming the Oscars themselves.
Ms. Chevalier imagined the fictional subject for Vermeer's painting as a housemaid who is invited into the inner sanctum of the master's studio, and allowed to wear his wife's pearl earring for the portrait, creating a certain frisson between the artist and his model.
The frisson of the show came from the fact that it hewed so close to reality, or at least whatever pseudo-reality can be gleaned from TV. It was a pioneering example of cringe-comedy, with a remorseless view of the vanity and veniality of the characters.
The soundtrack album to "Fifty Shades Freed," the finale of the soft-core BDSM romance trilogy based on the novels by E.L. James, arrives with its goal clearly designated: getting a song on the radio with enough of a sultry frisson to sell tickets for the movie.
To stand where the impossibly green meadow gives way to gray granite cliffs plummeting toward the sea, as you note the spot where Tyrion and Daenerys argued over strategy, where Jon Snow met Drogon, is to feel the frisson of an epic story meeting an epic landscape.
Its much-noted hacking authenticity is lost on most of us, but its clear-eyed depictions of how insurgences warp and falter, and how corporations smoothly turn rebellion into commerce — note the fsociety souvenir stand — give the show, at its best, a frisson few others can match.
Growing up, I'd felt a frisson of pride when my lawyer father set off in his sober black or beige suit for a rare morning in court, or appeared at my track meet in his workaday blazer and tie, leagues more dapper than all the other dads.
Even a detail as minor as Angela reacting to her ex-boyfriend's traitorous recording of their conversation by dropping his smartphone into a glass of beer delivers a momentary frisson of relatable panic over such a warranty-voiding act, regardless of how you feel about the man in question.
It's even possible that what made the date so "amazing" was the frisson of doing something you both know is sort of forbidden — at least before signing forms in triplicate with H.R. Still, I don't want to be the man who robs you of a potentially great love.
In season two, during which viewership grew by just over 20 percent, the show started focusing more energy on the growing friendship between Sheldon and Penny — a fairly classic "book smarts meets street smarts" dynamic, but with a frisson of sexual tension and a wholly unique character in Sheldon.
As Nina described her mother dragging her out of bed and forcing her to sit "cross-legged on the toilet floor pointing a Philips hairdryer on an extension lead into the chest cavity for half an hour to finish off the defrosting," I experienced a frisson of recognition.
The job of raising them is shifted onto the city itself, with its strange figures of urban folklore (like the mysterious Boo-Radley-esque Stoop Kid, or the reclusive Pigeon Man), its colorful characters (such as Dino Spumoni, a Dean Martin take-off), and its frisson of danger.
In championing long-unseen tulips, laboriously coaxing them back into existence and then slipping them into bouquets that find their way to smart London events, Nicholson lends a frisson to her industrious country life: With every fierce flame or ragged fringe, the past flickers, brilliantly, briefly, into view.
From the Frankenstein-y frisson of Mrs Walker's vital spark of electricity to the fact that the most famous fatherless human in history is known to believers as the "lamb of God", it would have been hard to craft a scientific advance with a richer and more treacherous cultural context.
But in general, the book offers a fresh way to look at familiar musicals — to break them down, pull them apart and examine more closely the structural elements that make them strong — even as Viertel acknowledges that there is ultimately no blueprint for the frisson that leaves audiences floating on air.
In a further twist on the prevailing dating app recipe, Blume adds in a little ephemeral frisson too, with the real-time selfie only being shown for seven seconds, before disappearing – during which period the user must decide whether they really do want to match with the person in the photo or not.
"Work" is a song about sex and its role in a fraught relationship, and those mumbles combine patois, the rhythms, and repetition of sex, and the frisson of being too fucked up to care—and the atmosphere that all that conjures says more than any verbose description of a sex act ever could.
But at this hour — because of a shivering or a silvering — alight with the frisson of being unknown in the night's oasis, hugging my captivated self so as to capture a sliver of exhilaration and bring back a swatch for those circumstances when I will need to remember what it was all for.
I'd prefer it to be illegal for anyone to come near me on the subway; I don't like how close the dentist has to get to my face when she's tugging on the corners of my mouth with her pinkies; and I often feel a frisson when someone touches one of my pens or notebooks.
In a group of pictures produced just a few years ago — Condon refers to them as her "nightclub series" — her bold, Pop palette and broad splashes of color, with swatches of velvety black serving as backgrounds come together to create an air of cool elegance tinged with a long-past-midnight frisson of world-weariness.
ACROSTIC — Today's acrostic is one of the rare excerpts from a book that I have actually read, and recognize while solving, so I experienced that frisson of excitement you get when you spot a celebrity or see frolicking bobcats on a nature cam (which you can volunteer to do for science, from your own home).
"I'd be lying if I said I didn't feel a frisson of anticipation when logging into Twitter early in the morning, knowing that the president of the United States could be tweeting about literally anything, no matter how strange or self-sabotaging," the Trump critic and conservative writer who goes by the name Allahpundit wrote recently.
Writing an opinion piece for the CBC, Steven Zhou, a Toronto-based human rights writer, laid out a nightmare vision that was sure to cause a frisson of fear go rippling up the tender spine of readers: The alt-right wasn't just in the US voting for Donald Trump and getting yelled at by Shia LaBeouf.
Little Women is, in fact, propelled less by its sweetness and light than it is by its internal frisson: between Marmee's placidity and her declaration of anger, between the family's love of their father and his infuriating uselessness, between the novel's embrace of the values of sentimental womanhood and their clear association with death and abjection.
"Too Young," the new single by Canadian production duo Zeds Dead, appears to exist largely for the novelty of getting Rivers Cuomo and Pusha T on the same song, the sort of overlap that last had frisson around the "Judgment Night" soundtrack era, and which the mash-up craze of the early 2000s should have killed for good.
The wealthiest society on earth is currently subjected to the chaotic rule of a mean and vulgar charlatan who refined the manipulation of humanity through a TV show that was a ratings smash in its first season, continued under his guidance for more than a decade, and relied on the cruelty of whimsical humiliation for its frisson.
That contrivance and the stolen glances it entails gives "Portrait of a Lady on Fire" an extra frisson of danger, even if Sciamma and her audience know exactly where this will lead: Drenched in fetishistic pleasures (those bodices!) and a faint mist of tragedy, the film is less about the narrative itself than its attempt to marry eroticism and feminist theory.
His images of naked men, including self-portraits, do not emphasize or fetishize the erotic but they do not shy away from it either; instead, Skolnick offers a frisson of the sexual (if a viewer really wants it) naturally embedded in the young artist's dutiful draftsmanship, which has found its groove in recent years, even as he has sharpened his thematic focus.
It doesn't seem like a movie was ever made but the "Magnificent Seven" won gold in what must count as one of the most nerve-racking competitions, narrowly beating the Soviet team, back when there was still a frisson of Cold War in the air — oh, and when people didn't even blink at an imposing male coach screaming at his minuscule athletes.
Since it's my job today, I indulged the frisson of curiosity I felt about MPEG and found out that the acronym is for the Moving Pictures Experts Group, who are actual people, a subset of the International Organization for Standardization, also actual people, who seek to herd the many cat videos in this world into a homogeneous format so that everyone in said world can enjoy them.
Compare: A Times and student review of the same work: Cirque du Soleil's "Kurios" Times Review: "In Cirque du Soleil's 'Kurios,' a Frisson of Novelty," a 2016 theater review by Christopher Isherwood "Kurios" is fundamentally the kind of nouveau-circus show that the company has virtually patented, although it does, in theory, have a spine of a narrative, at least according to the press materials.
I was in my late teens at the time and not a Cosmopolitan reader, but I still remember going out to buy that issue and staring at Reynolds — an actor I had not otherwise particularly warmed to — in all his glory (well, not quite all) with a frisson of delight, reveling in the fact that the erotic optics were now mine to claim and study closely.
In recent seasons, Mr. Kane has gone down something of a sex rabbit hole, a focus that veered into the sophomoric, but here it was subtle enough (Just ignore the "sexual cannibalism" T-shirt featuring a pair of preying mantises; the "Foreplay" sweats with two cheetahs) to provide an additive frisson to deconstructed lace boning that suggested skeletal structures as much as corsetry, jutting power shoulders and gray sweater dressing handcuffed in Swarovski.
Seeing "A Brighter Summer Day" in the early 1990s as part of a touring package of Taiwanese films, I was impressed by Mr. Yang's synthesis of detached European art cinema and florid Hollywood youth films; familiar yet exotic, his movie seemed a Michelangelo Antonioni version of "West Side Story" or a Wim Wenders remake of "Rebel Without a Cause," with the added frisson of pop ballads by Frankie Avalon and Ricky Nelson performed by Taiwanese singers in phonetic English.
Oh, what a frisson of transgression it was supposed to have delivered, denying a real artist the "heroic" authorship of his own work and vision!) With such subjects in mind, it's unfortunate that Nesbit looks only at artists in the center of the art market's mainstream (Gabriel Orozco, Gerhard Richter, and Matthew Barney turn up in these pages, too), for it could be exciting to see her apply her formidable observational skills to some truly original visionaries.
And nowhere more than in New York, where he lived ever after coming to work on the Herald Tribune in 1962, wallowing too in the city of unbridled appetites and ambition, of overbuilt ugliness, shoving oneupmanship…his favourite that party in 1970 at the Park Avenue duplex of Lenny Bernstein, in the days when status required nostalgie de la boue, real revolutionaries at your soirée, hence Black Panthers in leather pieces and wild Afros gobbling tiny morsels of Roquefort rolled in crushed nuts on gadrooned silver platters…Frisson of bomb-throwing danger!!!
And there is the added frisson that Suarez plays for Barcelona, while the star of Portugal, Cristiano Ronaldo, plays for its archrival, Real Madrid Goalkeeper: 1 Fernando Muslera (Galatasaray) Defenders: 3 Diego Godin (Atlético Madrid); 33 Jose Maria Gimenez (Atlético Madrid); 22 Martin Caceres (Lazio) Midfielders: 8 Nahitan Nandez (Boca Juniors); 14 Lucas Torreira (Sampdoria); 23 Matias Vecino (Inter Milan); 20 Rodrigo Bentancur (Juventus); 22014 Diego Laxalt (Genoa) Forwards: 22 Edinson Cavani (Paris St Germain); 20 Luis Suarez (Barcelona) Goalkeeper: 23 Rui Patricio (Sporting Lisbon) Defenders: 33 Jose Fonte (Dalian Yifang); 23 Pepe (Besiktas); 22 Raphael Guerreiro (Borussia Dortmund); 23 Ricardo Pereira (Porto) Midfielders: 23 Adrien Silva (Leicester); 10 Joao Mario (West Ham); 14 William Carvalho (Sporting); 11 Bernardo Silva (Manchester City) Forwards: 7 Cristiano Ronaldo (Real Madrid); 17 Goncalo Guedes (Valencia) Portugal and Uruguay don't face each other very often.

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