Top 1200 Comic Sans Quotes & Sayings - Page 2

Explore popular Comic Sans quotes.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
That's the difference between a great comic and a bad comic - one has great instincts and has a lot of compassion and can feel what's right and what's wrong.
At a young age, I was interested in comic books, which was really how I learnt to read. The name Cage came from a comic book character called Power Man.
We have had no good comic operas of late, because the real world has been more comic than any possible opera. — © Gilbert K. Chesterton
We have had no good comic operas of late, because the real world has been more comic than any possible opera.
You can't teach someone to be funny, but you can teach comic timing. If you listen to a good comic, you can learn how to put it on a page.
I think my printing to this day looks like the printing right out of a comic book. Actually, I always wanted to be in a comic book. I watched cartoons when I was a kid, too, and both comics and cartoons lit fire in my imagination. This realm holds a lot of interest for me, a lot of passion for me. So to be comic-ized, yeah, that's cool.
I've been involved in lots of comic book stuff; I've done numerous films based on comic books and TV shows.
The difference between a GOP convention and Comic-Con is that the people at Comic-Con have a much firmer grasp of reality.
The British are actually a lot more appreciative of the comic. In Canada, if you're perceived as a comic writer, there's a real snobbery, and you can't be serious. You're not a big hitter.
You either ignore the comic book and make a great movie or you stay very close to the comic book.
But one of my absolutely favorite things to do is go to comic book stores on the weekends. I'm a huge comic book nerd.
I'm in a comic book fan. I have long boxes at home. I'm a comic book collector; I'm not joking. It's just the coolest thing ever.
People think that because I play comic roles, my films will have a comic flavour as well. But I am a student of drama.
I grew up with comic books, and I'm from the Caribbean, so comic books were really a great interrogator of American culture for me. — © Winston Duke
I grew up with comic books, and I'm from the Caribbean, so comic books were really a great interrogator of American culture for me.
What looks tragic might be comic on second consideration, and what is comic might bring tears in time.
Comic book companies are like comic book villains; they keep coming back after they die.
He found a formula for drawing comic rabbits: This formula for drawing comic rabbits paid. Till in the end he could not change the tragic habits This formula for drawing comic rabbits made.
To paint comic books as childish and illiterate is lazy. A lot of comic books are very literate - unlike most films.
I just love comic books. I've always loved comic book art, and I just think it's amazing.
I'm used to doing comic books, where every month there's a new comic book! I find that the movie business is not quite the same. It doesn't move quite as fast.
I was also an Action Comic fan when I was a young kid and those comic books affected me and Superman is - he's the one. He's the first one. He's the one. He's the one everybody is always compared to.
My work looks like a comic book in form, but it's not a typical comic book in content. I write autobiographical stuff.
I still love comic books. When you have a kid, that's an excuse to keep reading all the comic books.
I've often been accused of being the comic's comic. It's a bad business model when your fans are the people who get in free.
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.
A lot of people who saw 'The Avengers' didn't read comic books, don't like comic book movies, and enjoyed it. That was huge for me.
There was no way Jacob would voluntarily miss an afternoon with Renesmee sans bloodsuckers. -Bella Cullen
Any time anyone makes a comic book into a movie, in some way, I think they have to kill the comic book.
It seems beyond the comprehension of people that someone can be born to draw comic strips, but I think I was. My ambition from earliest memory was to produce a daily comic strip.
When I was a kid, I used to be way more nerdy about comic books and comic book characters. I still love them, but I don't collect anymore.
I'm a huge comic book fan, and I've read a lot from all different comic book outlets.
The first comic book I ever bought, I was in third grade. It was 'Avengers,' I think, #240. I grew up in Kansas City. And I walked into a 7-11. I had seen, like, 'The Hulk' TV series. I knew about comic book heroes. I knew about it, but I hadn't actually had a physical comic in my hands until that time. And it was a big deal for me.
I've never been to Comic-Con, but I'm certainly aware from this side of the Atlantic that it's a very important part of film marketing now, even when the films are not directly linked to a comic.
The curse of comic book adaptations, when I was younger, was that the director or producer would go, "Don't worry about it, it's just a comic book."
I wasn't a comic book aficionado at all when I was a kid, but my cousin Weed was. Every time we went to visit him on the farm, he had two really fun things: comedy albums and comic books.
I wanted to do comic books... as a comic book artist, as an illustrator. But I'm not very good so I thought I should do something else! So I went to a film school when I was seventeen and came out when I was nineteen.
Silent people are dangerous; others are not so. [Fr., Les gens sans bruit sont dangereux; Il n'en est pas ainsi des autres.]
When I did get into comic books, it was after a whole other career, and when I got into comic books, they didn't even know who I was.
When you start to talk about comic books, a lot of the time, people forget about the comic part of it. They need to be funny. — © Samuel L. Jackson
When you start to talk about comic books, a lot of the time, people forget about the comic part of it. They need to be funny.
It's not easy for me as a writer to suspend my disbelief in a fantastical zone. I can do it. But it's more natural for me to write stories that are comic. Or hopefully comic.
I just didn’t want to be pigeonholed as an 'ethnic comic' or an 'Asian comic.' I just wanted to be on the same playing field as everyone else.
As a female comic, if you talk about sex in any capacity, you will be branded a 'sex comic,' so I might as well go full force on it.
We all know showbiz isn't easy, but being a comic - especially being a female comic - can be quite punishing.
I am thirty-three - the age of the good Sans-culotte Jesus; an age fatal to revolutionists.
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.
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.
I enjoy doing comic roles that blend with the story. I am looking for cinema that is sensible and is entertaining and engaging, be it is comic or serious.
Between last night and this morning, I've been getting a lot of messages from overseas fans along the lines of 'There's an American comic ripping off Bleach!' I'm not that good at English, but I looked at the site and it seems it's a comic by Nick Simmons, the son of Gene Simmons. To be honest, I'm more bothered by the fact that Gene Simmons' son is a comic artist than whether or not it's a rip-off.
'RoboCop,' when that came out, was like the best comic book movie ever, and it's not based on a comic book. — © Edgar Wright
'RoboCop,' when that came out, was like the best comic book movie ever, and it's not based on a comic book.
Being a hardcore old-school comic book lover, it took me a while to accept the need for comic book movies.
All of the stuff I can't afford to do on a TV budget, I just put into the comic book because you're really only limited in a comic by your artist's imagination.
The comic strip is what I looked at, and it's another reason I did it. The comic strip, where animals would comment on human behaviour, interested me.
I stole comic books from my brother when I was a kid, but I was never like an avid fan. I can't claim to be like a comic book geek.
I'm a big illustration and comic book fan. In my eyes, comic books and illustration are the same kind of art forms.
I don't know where the idea originated that memoir writing is cathartic. For me, it's always felt like playing my own neurosurgeon, sans anesthesia.
Comic books, if you're adapting a comic book - like X-Men, for example - you've got 40 years of amazing stories to dig into, things that incredible artists have been thinking about for decades.
My publisher's been shipping me to comic-cons, and it seems that my readership overlaps perfectly with the comic-con crowd.
I love to say that what's great about 'Legion' is that if you haven't read a comic book and you haven't seen an 'X-Men' movie, you can come in and understand it - and this can be your comic.
It used to be that comic strips were the big thing, and comic books were toilet paper.
I think every filmmaker makes different choices. I remember in the early days, in some of the early comic book movies, certain white dissolves were used that would try to emulate the look and feel of comic book panel borders. Sometimes they would frame shots in panels or circles that gave it a real comic book feel.
Cold & cunning come from the north: But cunning sans wisdom is nothing worth.
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