Comic Quotes
Most Famous Comic Quotes of All Time!
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When I first heard of it, I thought it was a horror film. 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' is such a strange name. I wasn't into the comic books at all.
I grew up reading 'Lord of the Rings' and comic books, so that kind of epic quality I like.
I see 'Cyborg' as probably the most iconic African American superhero within all of the comic worlds.
You can't be a proper comic unless you've been out on stage and felt the fear.
Dame Edna is that rarest sighting in our time of the absolute comic, an inspired personification of caprice whose comedy answered the primal call to take the audience for a tumble.
I really never had any ambitions to be a standup comic. I was talked into it by guys that I used to work out with.
I'm a huge Groucho fan. There were some great comic minds that would transfer into any generation, and Groucho is certainly one of them.
I grew up a big comic book reader, as a kid, and I love the whole fanboy crowd.
We're sort of putting a slightly different spin on Steve Rogers. He's a guy that wants to serve his country, but he's not a flag-waver. We're reinterpreting, sort of, what the comic book version of Steve Rogers was.
Alternative cartoonists have to rely on comic book stores to get their stuff in the hands of readers.
I'm so not a comic book guy. The most I knew about 'The Flash,' as a little kid, was the Underoos. I had 'The Flash' Underoos.
I grew up as a huge comic fan and a huge Batman & Robin fan. I watched all the TV shows, went to all the movies - I even had the lunch box; man, I was in!
I'm a comic; we get hecklers every night! It's really just part of the job.
I'm pretty much a comic that dwells on what happened to me instead of what's happening to me.
I have been successful in comic roles and people think that is all that I can do.
I'm a huge Marvel Comics fan, and I'm a huge 'Wolverine' fan, I like the 'X-Men' comic book.
I just typed up three, four paragraphs of an idea and dropped it in a box at the Chicago Comic Con in the summer of 2000, I guess, or 2001 - I forget. I just dropped it on a stack of a giant pile of dozens of other entries. Months later, I was thrilled to get a call from a Marvel editor while I was working my crappy day-job.
'Scalped' No. 1 was only the third comic script I'd ever written. I really learned a lot about writing on the fly with that series.
I think the oldest comic I got when I was a kid was an issue of 'World's Finest' - it had a Neal Adams cover with Batman where he had turned into a bat, and he was attacking Superman.
I'm a huge comic book collector. When I was a kid, I had both Marvel and DC. I was my own librarian. I made card files. I had origin stories of all the characters, and cross-referenced when they appeared in other comic books. I was full on.
I'm a huge comic book fan, and I've read a lot from all different comic book outlets.
I did plays in high school, and I usually got cast in the comic role, which I really enjoyed.
I was not a giant comic book fan as a kid, but to the extent that I did read comics, Spider-Man was always my favorite guy.
I was into Spider Man when I was a kid and that was the only comic I've ever read.
A lot of ones I’ve really chased and wanted - as a comic, I’ve always wanted to do a ‘Mock The Week’ - it’s always discussed, but for whatever reason it doesn’t happen.
I really don't have a lot in common with the people who attend the Comic Con. It's like assuming that all people who write prose are the same.
People who are readers of fiction aren't particularly interested in comic books.
Even a pretty traditional comic book writer can make valuable contributions to the Internet.
Most comic scriptwriters are very bad. The artists are good, but the writers are so bad.
The comic edge of 'Ghostbusters' will always be the same. It's still treating the supernatural with a totally mundane sensibility.
I'm a comic writer, in some ways, and a comic person when I'm up at a podium, in order to disguise the fact that in my heart I'm disgustingly earnest.
Unlike novel characters, comic book characters last an eternity. When a character is changed beyond recognition, there's no longer the merchandising aspect.
I've always been an enormous fan of comic books and anything that captures the real in a surreal environment.
I want to get away from my comic image. Not that I won't do any more comic roles, but I won't opt for the usual 'Govinda' type of comedies.
We probably put about four or five comic books out a year and probably about two or three art books and various trade paperbacks - maybe four or five of those a year - and that's what we do now.
Dennis the Menace was probably the most realistic comic book ever done. No space aliens ever invaded!
I grew up in the 1970s and early 1980s, loving comic books, and they were much cartoonier. And then everything became super dark and muscular and airbrushed, and I stopped collecting comics.
I'm a cartoonist. I write and draw comic books and graphic novels. I'm also a coder.
When I did 'Alien: Resurrection', a lot of the guys worked on planned production, and one of them was really into comic books and would draw all sorts of characters, and I was impressed with his sketches.
Comic strips are like a public utility. They're supposed to be there 365 days a year, and you're supposed to be able to hit the mark day after day.
It's only fitting that a Jewish comic makes his Just for Laughs anglo debut in a church, right?
When you write for a comic series, many superheroes have 60 or some years of history that you are coming into.
The first comic I ever read was an 'X-Men' themed anti-smoking PSA they gave out in health class when I was about 10.
Ninety percent of the comic books I've written in the past had little or nothing to do with Islam.
I read tons of comic books. My favourite is Grant Morrison, a Scottish comic writer.
I find the comic book audience a lot more intense than the fantasy one, definitely.
I met Harrison Ford at Barney's Beanery. And I met Steve Martin at the bar at the Troubador. He said he wanted to be a stand-up comic. I thought that was the worst idea because he was so square, so Orange County.
It's not like every male comic you meet is funny. Like, a lot of them are not funny.
Like his countryman, Kiefer Sutherland, Seth Rogen has a voice that's 10 years older than he is - a combination of world-weariness and exuberance, an instrument that he's mastered for specific comic shadings.
In 2013, when it turned out that the plot of LaBeouf's short film 'HowardCantour.com' (2012) had been purloined from graphic novelist Daniel Clowes's 2007 comic 'Justin M. Damiano', the actor-director responded with a series of tweet apologies that also appeared to be shoplifted.
Look at comic books. It used to be something that only geeks were into. And now it's everywhere.
I love written books and novels, but I really love graphic novels and comic books!
I certainly did feel inferior. Because of class. Because of strength. Because of height. I guess if I'd been able to hit somebody in the nose, I wouldn't have been a comic.
When I did Comic Relief, I did it to be on the show; it's a badge of honor as a comedian to do that show.
No, I'm not a comic book guy. I'm pretty fascinated with the subculture though and I do think that the world of comic books is such a natural transition into film.
No actor can be a complete artist without trying his/her hand at comic roles.
Years have passed since I have set foot in a comedy club. If the comic is doing badly it's painful, and if the comic is doing brilliantly, it's extremely painful.
In my personal life, I'm a comic novel. But then, so are we all, because we're human beings.
Films are pushing envelopes in terms of what is horrific, but also on other areas: in video games, in comic books and outside life.
I've keep every comic I've bought in my life. I used to be obsessive about boarding and bagging them all.
One of the attractions for me of having 'Watchmen' made into the first Motion Comic was just that - it was breaking new ground.
I'm a stand-up comic. Anything else I do besides that is a plus, but stand-up comedy is what I do, it's what I've been doing and it's what I'm going to keep doing.
Comic books and graphic novels are a great medium. It's incredibly underused.
It's embarrassing to be involved in the same business as the mainstream comic thing. It's still very embarrassing to tell other adults that I draw comic books - their instant, preconceived notions of what that means.
Back in the day, I used to read 'Archie,' but I haven't been a comic book aficionado.
Describing comic sensibility is near impossible. It's sort of an abstract silliness, that sometimes the joke isn't the star.
I brought samples in, because I didn't have any comic book samples, and I brought all these illustrations that I had influenced by Norman Rockwell and a couple of the other big boys. That's all I had, that's all I brought.
Going to the Comic Cons and meeting people - that's a fun energy to be around.
I think to be a successful comic, you have to be exceptionally smart and exceptionally perceptive.
In my head, scenes are shot from certain angles; there are camera pans, all of that kind of stuff. Converting those visuals to comic format was mostly a matter of adapting them to the rhythm of paneling.
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