Journalists' claims of objectivity are perhaps imperfectly realized; even so, the hard-line critics protest too much.
Yet the production is imperfectly realized, partly because the occasional mimed illustration of the lyrics is lost when the words are indistinct and, more important, because the deliberately step-poor choreography eventually undermines itself.
A minor play, it is also imperfectly realized in Chris McGarry's unevenly acted production.
"The world rushing by is sometimes imperfectly realized, sometimes bleak, occasionally luminous," Robert Stone said here in 2000.
The world rushing by is sometimes imperfectly realized, sometimes bleak, occasionally luminous.
Kilson's review in the American Historical Review described Blassingame's aims as "imperfectly realized" because he "lacks a clear analytical perspective".
The Talents can't be hamstrung by obsolete statutes imperfectly realized on a scrabbling compromise basis.
At this point David Mamet's film wanders away from its strength as a police melodrama and, like Bobby, becomes "a victim of its own imperfectly realized longings" (Canby).
Dmitri Yanov-Yanovsky had the interesting idea, imperfectly realized, of resetting the poems of Mahler's "Kindertotenlieder" to make a gradual approach to the original.
Yet these virtues of trust and solidarity remain imperfectly realized by current understandings of interests theory.