'X-Men' films have always been big, and necessarily so, because of the stories they have to tell.
Married men/women who chase single boys/girls are seriously so pathetic!
There are certainly not so many men of large fortune in the world, as there are pretty women to deserve them.
If you look at who drives the box office numbers at these films, it's men.
I think women get labeled a lot as being crazy. But I think men make us crazy.
The wish to hurt, the momentary intoxication with pain, is the loophole through which the pervert climbs into the minds of ordinary men.
It is a sad thing when men have neither the wit to speak well nor the judgment to hold their tongues.
I like men. They are hugely entertaining, but they have a lot of shortcomings and you just have to bear those in mind.
The true definition of a snob is one who craves for what separates men rather than for what unites them.
The Falklands thing was a fight between two bald men over a comb.
I saw a story in the Los Angeles Times that 40 percent of the viewers are men. It didn't really surprise me.
The irony is that the more unapologetically sexist men are in movies, the more women tend to be attracted to them in person.
My goal is to give young girls confidence in this world so they can be more like men in the decision-making process.
In the democracy of the dead all men at last are equal. There is neither rank nor station nor prerogative in the republic of the grave.
The men that is now is only all palaver and what they can get out of you.
'Mad Men' was really my first television role, and it never feels like TV to me. It's done at such a high level.
I attribute the quarrelsome nature of the Middle Ages young men entirely to the want of the soothing weed.
Calling gender violence a women's issue is part of the problem. It gives a lot of men an excuse not to pay attention.
The men whose manhood you have broken will loathe you, and will always be brooding and scheming to strike a fresh blow.
The world is blessed most by men who do things, and not by those who merely talk about them.
Working on 'Mad Men,' everything is word for word. And, honestly, I couldn't come up with anything better than that, so it's fine.