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.
Serial fiction is a conceit of comic books and soap operas. As one goes, so goes the other in terms of public consciousness.
I used to love comic books, and I love American comedy, and neither are afraid to tackle big themes.
I would draw my own comic book characters listening to metal. The drawing and music kind of went hand in hand.
What can I say? I was there at the right place and with the right people. My theatre background helped a lot in shaping my comic streak.
I had tried to come up with a superhero comic, but it didn't work 'cause I wasn't a superhero artist, and I left it unfinished.
In the 'Days Of Future Past' comic, the aim is to go back in time to preserve peace for the lives of mutants in the future.
Comic-Con is a bizarre world. It's wonderful. It's nice, feeling the love. Everywhere you walk, you feel the love.
Comic books are a big thing. I looked at them when I was a kid. I'm not a kid anymore, so I kind of grew out of that phase.
There is nothing that is so serious that you can't also see its comic side. Comedy is a way of talking about the most serious things.
I think Kangana Ranaut has a great comic timing on screen. Also Kirron Kher. I think she is fantastic.
Complaining that a comic is drunk is like going to a titty bar and complaining because your lapdancer is a communist.
I think it would be harder for me not to write comedy because the comic view of things is the one that comes most naturally to me.
I don't think there's hardly a comic out there that does clean material all the way around. There's a couple of guys that are clean, but I'm not one of them.
I just like the comic book sensibility. If I can turn them into films and TV series, that's just icing on the cake.
Well in the comic book world, I think the Hulk is the strongest, but I think I'd give him a heck of a fight!
The first music I heard that made me put away my comic books and make music was original punk.
I am no more solely counted for comic or villain roles, which comes more often in mainstream, masala films.
We're comic book fans; we're huge NASCAR fans.
Anyone who has the kind of inventive and inspired comic sensibility to be able to do that kind of work must be pretty talented.
Now, as a comic, if you're vaguely amusing you can go straight into TV, then you play the O2 and then everyone's sick of you.
In Chekhov, everything blends into its opposite, just fractionally, and this is sort of unsettling. And that's why you end up 100 years later asking, 'Is that moment tragic or comic?'
Dennis the Menace was probably the most realistic comic book ever done. No space aliens ever invaded!
The only hope we have are our bodies. We're all trapped in them and we all hate them, and it's this reason why we're comic and not tragic.
I mean, of course, I love sci-fi and stuff like that, but I'm not, like, a comic book crazy guy.
Bob Harras' personal and creative integrity is respected and renowned throughout the comic book industry. As an editor, he provides invaluable insight into storytelling and character.
Some comic artists I've known are better than most contemporary artists with work hanging in Tate Modern.
When you see people getting involved in Comic Relief, especially in tough times or times of recession, that's very positive.
Whatever I write, no matter how gray or dark the subject matter, it's still going to be a comic novel.
Laughs, just laughs. It's the only motivation of a comic.
Comic-Con was crazy, good crazy... Five minutes after I'm done, the cast of 'Twilight' is where I was sitting.
It's 2014, and adults are still writing articles about whether other adults should read comic books or not.
Comic books were telling me what life was about. This was how I kind of entered life, through fiction.
Those of you who are not aware of my brilliant career as a stand up comic, I'm not aware of it either so we might well wonder what we're doing here.
I'm excited to play any character that is based in reality. And I'd be even more excited if I can add a comic element to my role.
Hey, I think comic actors are the best actors.
I'm glad I've had the comic work. I plan to do others, but I could lay it down if I had to choose. I hope I don't have to, though.
There is a religion around 'Star Wars' that is different than even the fanaticism around comic books and other media.
The more you put out there, the more you have to resolve. 'Air' is the most literary comic I've written so far, and that poses problems.
You can write a little and can draw a little, but there's necessarily a limitation on both in a comic strip, since it appears in such a tiny space.
I'm a storyteller. I'm not like any other comic. I tell detailed stories - not made-up stuff, but true stories.
I don't see myself as a stand-up comic doing cynical, mean-spirited or disrespectful stuff. I'm very aware that I don't like to disrespect people too much.
As psychotic as it gets outside, the comic can be more psychotic.
For me, who loves to draw and who loves to write and cannot choose between one or the other, the comic is the best form.
I don't mind doing glamorous roles, comic roles, weekly shows, or something different from what I've done earlier.
I have to read comic books all first, because now when you get into graphic novels, they are definitely in deep graphic.
I'm a big comic book nerd so every time I'm in costume and see everyone in costume I'm just like "This is sick."
No matter how heinous someone's behaviour, if you make them a comic character, you can't expect people to hate them.
I've always had a soft spot for comic books. I learned to read from them. The words in them were so interesting.
My whole comic persona is that of a guy who explores the id: I romanticize gluttony, I romanticize laziness, and people identify with that.
You have no idea the people I meet when I do these Comic-Cons. When I go sign autographs and say hello to people, I see everything!
I thought I had a great opportunity when I started doing my comic book in 1972. I thought there was so much territory to work in.
I've never really been a genre fan. I never grew up reading comic books or was a horror buff.
I come to Comic-Con in San Diego because this is where those fans are - those to whom I owe the longevity of my career.
Comedy is free therapy. And if it's done well, the audience and the comic take turns being the doctor as well as the patient.
I think that sense of wonderment, where you walk out expecting the ordinary and are confronted by the extraordinary, is something that has always interested me, whether in TV or comic books.
Unfortunately, when you look at the amount of comic book heroes out there, minority heroes are few and far between.
And the comic Daniel Kitson, he makes very good pies. I think he made one with feta, it was incredible. King of the pies.
I take the good with the bad. I always wanted to be a comic, and part of that, for me, was that I wanted to be on the road. It's a lonely existence, but it is what it is.
I've never really been a genre fan. I never grew up reading comic books, or was a horror buff.
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