Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I think the people who would be the least interested in my work would be people who read lots of comic books.
I used to describe myself as a comic novelist, but my concerns seem to have darkened over the past few years.
It's a privilege and honor to write and star in my own comic. I can officially cross that off the bucket list!
I like good stories above all else... and kickin' art really goes the final stretch to ensure a comic is good.
Spider-Man initially made me want to come to New York and work for Marvel; I wanted to be a comic book artist.
Especially those first few years of my comic book career, I had no idea what was going to happen the next day.
When you write for a comic series, many superheroes have 60 or some years of history that you are coming into.
And what's interesting about him as a comic character is that the custard pie hardly ever ends up on his face.
I'm a storyteller. I'm not like any other comic. I tell detailed stories - not made-up stuff, but true stories.
A comic, you have to be looking down at him. My favorite rooms, the audience is above the stage, stadium-style.
If you're going to draw a comic strip every day, you're going to have to draw on every experience in your life.
I really wanted to do things that weren't comic. It felt like finding people who can see this other side to me.
The really cool thing about when you're playing a comic book character is that no one knows what he sounds like.
Metal guys are huge nerds. A good percentage of them are either horror or sci-fi or comic book or fantasy nerds.
Being on 'SNL' gives you a unique experience that almost no one else has. It's like Harvard for the comic actor.
I've always had a soft spot for comic books. I learned to read from them. The words in them were so interesting.
I get mad when people call me an action movie star. Indiana Jones is an adventure film, a comic book, a fantasy.
I've always been a big fan of utopian, future, new-world stories - 'V For Vendetta,' comic books, graphic novels.
I watch comic book movies. Give me 'The Avengers,' give me 'Thor', those are my area. But I don't watch comedies.
I'm a frustrated stand-up comic. If you hand me a microphone and I get one laugh, then I'll go on for 20 minutes.
I never storyboard. I hate it. I don't understand why so many directors want to make comic strips of their films.
When you say 'comic book' in America, people think of Mickey Mouse, and Archie. It has a connotation of juvenile.
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 always bring my kids vacation souvenirs printed in Comic Sans, so they know I love them but not unconditionally.
Comic-Con has been an amazing experience. It's overwhelming, I have to admit, because of the lines and the crowds.
I'm not Christian. I didn't meet Jesus. I met something that looked like it had come out of a 'Heavy Metal' comic.
When you're onstage with Chris Rock, anything can happen. He is one of the greatest comic geniuses we've ever seen.
I'd like to make people who see me in comic pantomime on the screen feel the way Mark Twain makes his readers feel.
I want to be known as a funny comic not just a funny Latino comic. I want to be able to go everywhere and anywhere.
'Jingle Belle' spins out of my love for just sitting down and reading a good, fun Sunday morning comic strip panel.
A stand-up comic is judged by every line. Singers get applause at the end of their song no matter how bad they are.
I just like the comic book sensibility. If I can turn them into films and TV series, that's just icing on the cake.
I'm a big illustration and comic book fan. In my eyes, comic books and illustration are the same kind of art forms.
I liked baseball and sports and Garbage Pail Kids and comic books. I know what it's like to really adore something.
No matter how heinous someone's behaviour, if you make them a comic character, you can't expect people to hate them.
You learn just by trying and experimenting. By the time I was 14, I had my own comic strip in the Kansas City paper.
To paint comic books as childish and illiterate is lazy. A lot of comic books are very literate - unlike most films.
Comic timing... is how to have a relationship with the camera and deal with the camera without looking like you are.
The goal of almost every comic is to find a comedy voice - a specific point of view that an audience can latch onto.
We can't really make a living doing comic books, despite the fact that would be an awfully fun way to make a living.
I did end up becoming a drawer, a sketcher and a painter because of comic books, but I didn't read them. Not at all.
If you're a comic, you don't have a rehearsal room, you rehearse on stage. My main concern is remembering everything.
The comic book industry has turned into the wellspring for all of these movies that are all based on the comic books.
Gene Hackman's portrayal of Lex Luthor did not exist in comic books. This is not my Lex Luthor, but I really like it.
There is a religion around 'Star Wars' that is different than even the fanaticism around comic books and other media.
Clay Aiken is amazing beyond that glorious voice. Turns out he is an excellent comic actor and a master of character.
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.
If you've got comic book fans and soap fans and country fans, I think you've hit the whole world. What else is there?
Writing music is sort of my hobby, but it's been falling off more and more. Doing comic books takes up my entire life.
An English philosopher said that whatever is cosmic is also comic. Do the best you can and don't take it so seriously.