I don't consider myself a comic but a performer. A comic tells bad jokes.
Is it my end-all and be-all to become a standup comic? No.
I'm not really all that familiar with comic book culture.
I'm not a comic book guy at all.
People still go to Comic-Con because they love comics.
I was seeking comic originality, and fame fell on me as a by-product. The course was more plodding than heroic: I did not strive valiantly against doubters but took incremental steps studded with a few intuitive leaps.
I dug up some old John Buscema 'Conan' comics. Man, when Alfredo Alcala was inking, that was some of the most beautiful black and white comic art ever published. The stories are good, too, though early '70s comics based on Conan is a festival of sexi...
I played Dungeons & Dragons and have read comic books since I was a kid.
Comic books are a big passion of mine.
Oh I'm a huge comic book movie fan.
I didn't break into comics to write fairytales or crime comics.
That was the appealing thing about comics: There literally is no budget in comics. You're only limited by your imagination.
There are too many good comic book writers out there. I'd rather remain a fanboy.
I still love comic books. When you have a kid, that's an excuse to keep reading all the comic books.
I don't really read magazines that much. I read comic books.
My films are comical films. They are made to laugh at. They are comical - and scientifically correct.
I didn't see a lot of comic books growing up.
I'm not of a science background, I was never a comic book geek, and I was never a gamer.
I love comic books and always did as a kid.
I kept telling my mom that reading comic books would pay off.
I like this other world, this forgetting of myself. The actor works in order to escape, not to find himself. You become an actor by leaving yourself, and then you have to keep acting. How tragic!