Top 11 Quotes & Sayings by Drew Daywalt

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American director Drew Daywalt.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Drew Daywalt

Drew Daywalt, is an American author and filmmaker. He is best known for writing the best-selling children's picture book The Day the Crayons Quit, and its sequel The Day the Crayons Came Home, both illustrated by Oliver Jeffers. Daywalt is also known for writing scripts for American television and Hollywood studio films, and for creating a number of short horror films for release on the internet.

Around 2008 when the writers' strike happened, all my stuff was getting stuck in development, and I thought, 'I'm going to try my hand at horror because I always loved it as a kid.'
I didn't want to do 'The Fluffy Puppy Learns to Hold Hands!' or 'Kitty Gets a Box to Play In!' There's a place for that for the little ones - some kids need that stuff. But I'm too dark and sarcastic.
I just want to be entertained. The stories that have aged the best are the ones where the wolf eats grandma, or the woman is going to bake children in an oven, or the bear is going to eat the girl for eating the porridge. There are lessons in there, but they're deeply engrained and hidden.
In Hollywood it's really tough to change genres; you have to re-prove yourself. — © Drew Daywalt
In Hollywood it's really tough to change genres; you have to re-prove yourself.
My daughter has seen the transition from struggling screenwriter to successful picture book author, and she's enjoyed it very much because she's a wonderful little kid. And she's always believed in her daddy.
I never try to sit down with a moral because kids smell that and run.
I grew up in a haunted house, reading Dr. Seuss.
I want to be Willy Wonka. He has a really fun spirited side but also a dark, justice-giver side.
I tend to look way back for my inspiration: H.P. Lovecraft, Edgar Allen Poe.
There are too many remakes, too many reimaginings. Nothing new, and that's always a bad sign. They remade 'Frankenstein' 26 times between 1930 and 1970, so it's not a new phenomenon.
I used to run with Chris Nolan before he was 'Chris Nolan.' I remember when he was trying to sell 'Memento,' and he just couldn't.
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