Roger Chillingworth Leech Quotes & Sayings
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Top Roger Chillingworth Leech Quotes
The book is even quirkier, but it's hard to bring all of that stuff to a movie. With a book, you use your imagination more and create your own way to make it all make sense. — Jemaine Clement
Feeling pain is still better than not feeling, isn't it? — Jonathan Safran Foer
One of the Canadian customs guards got suspicious and said 'Haven't you been coming and going across the border a lot lately?' I finally told him I was auditioning for Wolverine and everything changed. One minute it was get ready for the strip search, the next it was come on and sign six hundred autographs. — Hugh Jackman
It's more fun playing someone who isn't just a bad guy. — Martin Freeman
Losing maturity in one's fiction for the sake of marvels and monsters can also mean losing propriety, and that's not always a bad thing. — Hal Duncan
John Ford was so funny that I couldn't wait to go to work in the morning. — Richard Widmark
The rest of my life (as a 39 year old) I want to reflect on what life is. — Albert Einstein
And the reason is that until Wonder came along and figured out how to spread the idea of sliced bread, no one wanted it. That the success of sliced bread is not always about what the patent is like or what the factory is like, it's about can you get your idea to spread or not? — Seth Godin
He really loved her, despite his conflicting thoughts. He even loved her before she became lovable. — Leanne Davis
He who eats the fruit should at least plant the seed; ay, if possible, a better seed than that whose fruit he has enjoyed. — Henry David Thoreau
You don't match... so you die. — Deyth Banger
The thing people forget when they are looking for solutions is there is nothing final in history. — Amira Hass
It would be difficult, indeed, to overestimate the transcendent importance of the part the railroad has played in making the Nation what it is to-day. Perhaps it would be within bounds to say that without railroads to bind the States into one homogeneous whole, the Nation never could have attained its present size and importance. — Charles Frederick Carter