Famous Quotes & Sayings

Filmland Magazine Quotes & Sayings

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Top Filmland Magazine Quotes

When I write, it is always the melody that comes first, and it just happens to be the case that the most beautiful tunes are sad, and the lyrics follow the mood of the melody. — Francoise Hardy

I used to send away for eight-minute Super 8 movies of various Ray Harryhausen scenes advertised on the back of 'Famous Monsters of Filmland' magazine. — Peter Jackson

So May 4th in the labor movement has always been an important date. — William Kunstler

Fact: Girls who are having a good sex thing stay in New York. The rest want to spend their summer vacations in Europe. — Gail Parent

Talking to girls was out of the question. To me, they were like some exotic alien species, both beautiful and terrifying. — Ernest Cline

You'll take her to a healer, prince, or so help me I will cut out that piece of ice you call a heart and take her myself. — Julie Kagawa

We were on the same boat, just trying to figure it all out. — Blakney Francis

He'll rock your world then toss you aside like you're yesterday's trash." Chico Rivera — Bella Jeanisse

If I could dwell where Israfel hath dwelt and he where I he might not sing so wildly well a mortal melody while a bolder note then this might swell from my lyre in the sky. — Edgar Allan Poe

True politeness is perfect ease and freedom. It simply consists in treating others just as you love to be treated yourself. — Lord Chesterfield

With literary biographies, you're either shelved with other biographies or next to your subject's fiction. — Blake Bailey

Canadian official multiculturalism has developed through the 1970s and '80s, and has become in the '90s a major part of Canadian political discourse in Canada rather than in the United States, which is also a multi-ethnic country, may be due to the lack of an assimilationist discourse so pervasive in the U.S. The melting pot thesis has not been popular in Canada, where the notion of a social and cultural mosaic has had a greater influence among liberal critics. This mosaic approach has not been compensated with an integrative politics of antiracism or of class struggle which is sensitive to the racialization involved in Canadian class formation. The organized labour movement in Canada has repeatedly displayed anti-immigrant sentiments. For any inspiration for an antiracist theorization and practice of class struggle Canadians have looked to the United States or the Caribbean. — Himani Bannerji

But the greatest wisdom could be blinded by the glare of vanity. — Paulo Coelho