A Quote by Malcolm McDowell

It's always a fascinating subject - a serial killer let loose on a small community. It always holds, it's always scary. — © Malcolm McDowell
It's always a fascinating subject - a serial killer let loose on a small community. It always holds, it's always scary.
We also told her you weren't a serial killer," Brit interjected. Cam nodded. "That's a glowing recommendation. Hey, at least he's not a serial killer. I'm going to put that on my Facebook profile.
Well, the clues are there. They always are. Which is why when crimes are solved decades after the fact, it's obvious that the clues had always been right in front of them. A traffic ticket in Brooklyn is how they got ["Son of Sam" serial killer] David Berkowitz. You've just got to look.
I do look forward to doing things in the future that I haven't done before. Do you know what I have always dreamt about? Playing a serial killer!
I do look forward to doing things in the future that I havent done before. Do you know what I have always dreamt about? Playing a serial killer!
Your plays are always personal. You can't help seeing yourself in the serial killer you've just written. But they get less specifically personal.
Starting a new job is always scary, or at least for me it's always scary. It's like the first day of school.
My first book was called 'Buried Dreams,' about a serial-killer, which was probably about ten years ahead of the serial-killer curve. It was a national bestseller, but it was three years of living in the sewer of this guy's mind.
I'm always entrenched in the community. I'm always working with the high schoolers, no matter what school they're at. I'm always in my community.
I think it's interesting that when you play a lesbian, people ask you if you're a lesbian, but if you play a serial killer, nobody asks you if you're a serial killer.
Telling the community a serial killer is out there stirs up a lot of unpleasant attention.
I hope there's always at least a small part of me that's always surprised, always taken aback, always childlike or innocent.
I've always remembered this quote from a book that I read as a kid. It was something along the lines of "What's scary is not necessarily what goes bump in the night, but that which whispers at midday." And I've always held that. The day can just be as scary as night.
I build my stories character-first, and so whether it's a monster or a ghost or a serial killer, the fear of something dark interrupting life has just always been something that matters to me as a storyteller, or what I keep finding myself drawn back to.
I always go with the story and character and if those are good and if the setting is something that's scary (horror films seem to always take place at night and the weather's always bad) then I might be interested.
It is no accident that this homeplace, as fragile and as transitional as it may be, a makeshift shed, a small bit of earth where one rests, is always subject to violation and destruction. For when a people no longer have the space to construct homeplace, we cannot build a meaningful community of resistance.
Although there are some enormously gifted lecturers and preachers who do create community with oratory, I like to do anything I can to engage my students with each other, with me, and with the subject. And the subject, I think, always has to take prominence.
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