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Screenwriter Quotes

Quotes tagged as "screenwriter" Showing 1-30 of 56
James Dickey
“I go out on the side of a hill, maybe hunting deer, and sit there and see the shadow of night coming over the hill, and I can swear to you there is a part of me that is absolutely untouched by anything civilized. There's a part of me that has never heard of a telephone.”
James Dickey

Mark Barkawitz
“Oslo probably owed them money. Sockeye Sammy’s shiner testified that it might not be a good idea to stiff his employer. But if I couldn’t pay up, I’d surely make myself scarce, too!”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“My life had turned into a Raymond Chandler detective story and there seemed to be nothing I could do to stop its precipitous slide.”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“To be truthful, Mike, we’d like to kill you. The vote went two-to-one.”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“I bent down and felt her neck for a pulse, as I’d seen the paramedics do with Philip.”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“From inside the cooler, Duke pounded on the door one, last time: “Let me outta here!”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“Just so we’re straight,” I said confidentially, staring into his lazy eyes, a stupid smile on his sophomoric, look-I-can-grow-a-mustache-now face. “I don’t like you.”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“Jolly Jay rested the Louisville Slugger on his shoulder, as if he were Thor or some other god-like warrior who had come down from the heavens to our Deus ex machina rescue.”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“As if some kind of demon were racking his brain, Curley Joe stood in front of the jukebox with a small, silver handgun still pointed at the hole its bullet had blown through the shattered Plexiglas.”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“Any weapons or drugs, Mr. Hepp?” she asked.
“No. Of course not.”
She continued to look inside the car at the back seat. “What’s in the briefcase?”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“Oh, we’ll see you again, Mike. Just not with the same, pretty face. I hear you’re an actor, too. Pity. Your days of wooing leading ladies are about to end.”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“I think the sun was just peeking over the horizon—dawn patrol, as the coca-nuts termed it—when I finally fell off to a troubled sleep.”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“So before we sent his ashes up to Iceland, Duke suggested that we have a little wake for Oslo at Ur-Place. Where else?”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“I know when someone’s trying to get me in bed, babe,” she huffed, crossing her arms under her breasts. “They were acting all giggly about it, trying to buy me shots at the bar to get me drunk.”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“She left the doorway, the brush idly in her hand—like a grenade, waiting to go off—and sat on the arm at the far end of the couch.”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Mark Barkawitz
“Sure, I’d thought about it—Go northeast, young man! To Cody. You know, to win her back. Like Dustin Hoffman chasing Katharine Ross in “The Graduate.” But what was the use in that?”
Mark Barkawitz, Full Moon Saturday Night

Robin S. Baker
“There aren't many days that I'm not writing. Practice makes progress.”
Robin S. Baker

Sylvester Stallone
“Once in one's life, for one mortal moment, one must make a grab for immortality; if not, one has not lived.”
Sylvester Stallone

Sylvester Stallone
“Real love is when you become selfless and you are more concerned about your mate's or children's egos than your own. You're now a giver instead of a taker.”
Sylvester Stallone

“This day I remember well. It is the very first moment in my life when I saw desperation enacted by hate. I watched as the second plane flew into the second tower, the pit in my stomach plummeting to a place I have yet to recover. The devastation of those jumping, the visions of cement and debris falling from the sky like thunder. I remember not being able to reach my friends and coworkers, the fear paralyzing me as I imagined them fighting for their lives and the lives of countless others. I remember my cousin who was in the Pentagon who was narrowly spared that day. That day — like it did for so many — that changed me. Forever.
And while we honor those lost and remember those who did such things, remember that it was everyone coming together that saved this nation. It was us standing beside one another regardless of politics or religion, race or gender, and no one cared about wealth or poverty, or anything else for that matter. In that moment America stood tall.
Today we are completely undone … unraveled and our excuse is moot.
I wish we could, as a nation, realize that 9/11 represented a multitude of things.
Our freedom, our fear, our triumphant spirit to overcome tragedy and terrorism—foreign and domestic—and our ability to eliminate prejudice when confronting human decency.
Today we remember the many lives lost, those still suffering, and those who bravely and courageously continue to do all they can to protect our freedom to speak out, to challenge oppressors, and to rise above the lunacy. New Yorkers are proof that communities of all colors, beliefs and socio economic statuses can come together in the face of adversity. I hope this country — state by state — can stop acting like children and instead act like human beings. That we can be worthy of the months and weeks and days that followed 9/11 when we rose to the occasion as a collective whole.”
Dawn Garcia

Don Roff
“My job as a writer is not to judge my characters, no matter how coldhearted or twisted they may be, but simply to understand them.”
Don Roff

“I live my scripts, born from my life” — Yvonne Padmos, Film The Challenge: 50 Filmscripts”
Yvonne Padmos

“Wealth buys bodyguards, not just diamonds” — Yvonne Padmos, Ella in Marbella”
Yvonne Padmos

“My barometer in my life of joy is how my kids are doing.”
Kate Hudson

“I'm a strong believer that we're here to do more than entertain, that we're here to impact on the lives of our audience.”
William J. Bell

“The whole business of marshaling one's energies becomes more and more important as one grows older.”
Hume Cronyn

“I think in my old age I've come to realize just how precious everything is and I try to value the many blessings that have been bestowed upon me, but there's also this sense of vulnerability if fortune took a turn for the worse and you live with the awareness that anything can happen in this world."
(said in an interview the year he died, 1998)”
Phil Hartman

“I think in my old age I've come to realize just how precious everything is and I try to value the many blessings that have been bestowed upon me. But there's also this sense of vulnerability if fortune took a turn for the worse and you live with the awareness that anything can happen in this world.”
Phil Hartman

Ray Bradbury
“If you want to be good, practice, practice, practice.”
Ray Bradbury

“Life is unpredictable. Just find the person that you trust completely. That was very hard for me, and it took a long time, so I'm very grateful for him."
(referring to her husband Andrew W.K., 2025)”
Kat Dennings

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