I'm not an angry man.
“I'm not an angry man.”
— Joe Cornish · Angry
The World Motivation
I'm not an angry man.
“I'm not an angry man.”
— Joe Cornish · Angry
I'm not an angry man.
One of my favourite films is called 'Lacombe Lucien,' directed by Louis Malle. The lead character in that film, like the lead characters in many '70s and '80s films, has a moral ambiguity to him.
I worry whether it's not really the best way to live one's life - trying to fulfill the dreams you had as a child. Maybe it's quite a backwards approach.
I did magic at children's parties when I was a kid.
I don't think it's an incredibly radical premise to try and have sympathy for someone who has made a mistake.
He steps on stage and draws the sword of rhetoric, and when he is through, someone is lying wounded and thousands of others are either angry or consoled.
I think I was born with a natural way of looking at something and trying to find the ways in which it was odd or funny, Even in the sad or angry stuff, I was, 'Well, but where is the funny part of this?'
I try to surround myself with the people who genuinely believe in changing things, that are angry about it and want to make changes and want to make a change and are willing.
I played 'Angry Birds' and tried to see what the hoopla was about.
If Obama fails to win reelection, let the blame be first laid at the door of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, who at a pivotal point threw gasoline on the flames by comparing angry American citizens to Nazis.