Mark Gatiss quotes:

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  • One of the pleasures of the original 'Grimm's Fairy Tales' is how incredibly ghastly they are. The ugly sisters have their eyes pecked out by crows.

  • I am a gay man who loves James Bond films and snooker - all kinds of working-class pursuits.

  • When I was seven or eight, I was bought a fantastic book called 'The Movie Treasury of Horror Movies' by Alan G. Frank; it became my bible. It's packed full of the most amazing photos and is still fantastic to look at.

  • The thing is, horror is a big part of 'Sherlock Holmes.' Doyle also wrote a lot of great horror stories, so there's a lot more horror in 'Holmes' that people possibly think of. There's a lot of curses and mysticism and real scares.

  • I'm terribly nostalgic, but I'm with the Elizabethans who thought nostalgia was a disease. It's a dangerous place to be because you can get caught up in it.

  • 'Monty Python' is now more recognised by the films than by the TV series.

  • I think one of the few faults in Dickens is that mostly his lead characters are blanks - who is David Copperfield, who is Oliver Twist? And yet he takes such joy in populating the rest of his novels with these fantastic, grotesque people like Pecksmith and so on.

  • I grew up with low self-esteem. I didn't think I was very pretty. I had glasses, red hair and was generally quite a spod.

  • I love going to galleries, particularly the National Portrait Gallery.

  • I love the Shakespeare history plays; I love the struggle for the crown as a plot.

  • Son of Frankenstein' is never talked about in the same tone as James Whale's 1931 'Frankenstein.' But it should be. It was Boris Karloff's last appearance in the Frankenstein series and stars Donnie Dunagan, then a child actor.

  • I am a gay man who loves James Bond films and snooker - all kinds of working-class pursuits."

  • I had a girlfriend before I ever had a boyfriend, but it was just a phase.

  • Slightly forgettable movies can sometimes make great musicals.

  • Sci-fi and fantasy used to be a TV staple throughout my childhood. Then it just stopped dead. It was seen as culty, a minority interest.

  • I always wanted to do Restoration comedy. It seems like so much fun.

  • Fear is an underrated emotion. And that's why I think it's very dangerous to try and cosset children from it. A healthy scare is as good as as a healthy laugh. In fact, they're two sides of the same coin. There is a desire to shield from the knocks and bumps of reality.

  • They are called 'Emos' now, and before that they were 'Goths.' They didn't have a name for it when I was one, but I was that black-wearing teenager and yes, I wore a little eyeliner.

  • Grooming-wise, it is now a constant battle as I progressively turn into my father. I have to keep on top of ear and nose hair - things you never believe will happen to you. Suddenly I have a shaving brush in my ear and I don't know where it's come from, and the more hair I take the out, the more it surges back.

  • My dad was quite a forbidding figure. I realise now that that was mainly because he worked so hard. He wasn't unkind, but he was a presence.

  • It's a cliche, but it's true that all the fun lies in baddies, grotesques and comic roles.

  • The reason I wanted to do 'The First Men in the Moon' was that there is something so challenging in the combination of space travel and the Edwardian period.

  • Europe is so much the home of Horror, with its myths of vampires, werewolves, witchcraft and the undead, yet it's like those myths were exported to Hollywood, leaving Europe the room to develop a new tradition as a way of processing its traumas, particularly the two world wars.

  • Even when I was a child, I always wanted to be older. I realised just in time that it's a mistake and to enjoy my youth while I had it.

  • I'm a great believer in the beauty and the power of surprise.

  • The question I ask myself is: have I really just become a squeamish middle-aged man, or has something happened to the horror genre that shows a growing appetite for watching torture, or at least a desire to explore it on film? And if so, why would that be? I can't pretend I know. I just know I don't like it.

  • 'Misfits' is one of my favorite shows; I think it's a fantastic show.

  • At school I briefly wanted to be a palaeontologist, but I was no good at chemistry and physics.

  • Even though it's meant to be the season of jollity and goodwill, there's something delicious about the anticipation of a Christmassy ghost thrill.

  • I think a lot of people who say they are bisexual aren't.

  • [Toby Jones] is completely different. It's a completely different character. He's the darkest villain we've had. There was always something charming and engaging about Moriarty. There was something fascinating and actually amoral, rather than immoral, about Charles Augustus Magnussen. This guy is the purest evil. Sherlock [Holmes] is actually appalled by him.

  • All films speak to their times. It becomes obvious only after.

  • All pleasure should be a little bent, don't you think?

  • Benedict is bumbly, sweet, affable; the nicest man you've met.

  • I always compare reading anything on the Internet to listening at doors. If you don't want to hear anything bad about yourself, you should never do it.

  • I don't care what other people think any more about me writing my own parts.

  • I prefer sneaking in the back door.

  • I used to go to the gym regularly and swim an awful lot, but that was when I was unemployed and knew leisure intimately.

  • If not exactly raging against the dying of the light, I was at least a little cross with it.

  • I'm an actor and a writer, that's how I think of myself. Sometimes my time is divided equally, sometimes less equally, but that's what I do.

  • It was all quite ghastly and I was very fond of it.

  • One man's fish is another man's poisson.

  • Some facts in life are immutable. One is, trust no-one who uses the word 'trope'.

  • That's what makes characters interesting. If Sherlock [Holmes] had started out being a straightforward man, we wouldn't be talking about him now. If he became one, that would be interesting. But you have to give him somewhere to go, as [Conan] Doyle did.

  • The first film I can remember seeing on TV was 'The Brides of Dracula.' I was instantly hooked.

  • We made our Moriarty very different to [Conan] Doyle's. He's Irish, and he brings all his charm, his twinkle and his humor to it while he's also terrifying.

  • We turned the lights off to save money, so you can't really see it. It's the same show. Hopefully, there are lots of laughs and lots of great personal stuff, but it is explicitly a darker season [4 of Sherlock Holmes].

  • You can always expect tragedy as well as adventure; that's just how it goes,

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