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William Peter Blatty Quotes

American writer and filmmaker (b. 1928), Birth: 7-1-1928, Death: 12-1-2017 William Peter Blatty Quotes
1.
From the cab stepped a tall old man. Black raincoat and hat and a battered valise. He paid the driver, then turned and stood motionless, staring at the house. The cab pulled away and rounded the corner of Thirty-sixty Street. Kinderman quickly pulled out to follow. As he turned the corner, he noticed that the tall old man hadn't moved but was standing under the streetlight glow, in mist, like a melancholy traveler frozen in time.
William Peter Blatty

2.
You don't blame us for being here, do you? After all, we have no place to go. No home... Incidentally, what an excellent day for an exorcism.
William Peter Blatty

3.
I have never read horror, nor do I consider The Exorcist to be such, but rather as a suspenseful supernatural detective story, or paranormal police procedural.
William Peter Blatty

4.
But a myth, to speak plainly, to me is like a menu in a fancy French restaurant: glamorous, complicated camouflage for a fact you wouldn't otherwise swallow, like maybe lima beans.
William Peter Blatty

5.
The demon is a liar. He will lie to confuse us; but he will also mix lies with the truth to attack us. His attack is psychological, Damien. And powerful.
William Peter Blatty

Similar Authors: Ambrose Bierce George R. R. Martin Ray Bradbury F. Scott Fitzgerald John Steinbeck Robert A. Heinlein George Saunders Isaac Asimov Anton Chekhov Arthur Conan Doyle Edgar Allan Poe William Faulkner Jorge Luis Borges Arundhati Roy Nathaniel Hawthorne
6.
What looked like morning was the beginning of endless night
William Peter Blatty

7.
I didn't read The Haunting of Hill House until sometime early in the 1990's.
William Peter Blatty

8.
I get cassettes near Academy Award time of every movie that's made that thinks it has some kind of chance for a nomination - that's when I watch my movies
William Peter Blatty

Quote Topics by William Peter Blatty: House Men Thinking Sun Powerful Devil Eye Doe Crucible Haunting Children Writing Evil Places To Go Awards Joy Revenge Dull Steps Detectives Life Unconscious Nice Order Use Father Horror Believe Personality Night
9.
Every man that ever lived craved perfect happiness, the detective poignantly reflected. But how can we have it when we know we’re going to die? Each joy was clouded by the knowledge it would end. And so nature had implanted in us a desire for something unattainable? No. It couldn’t be. It makes no sense. Every other striving implanted by nature had a corresponding object that wasn’t a phantom. Why this exception? the detective reasoned. It was nature making hunger when there wasn’t any food. We continue. We go on. Thus death proved life.
William Peter Blatty

10.
In order for life to have appeared spontaneously on Earth, there first had to be hundreds of millions of protein molecules of the Ninth Configuration. But, given the size of the planet Earth, do you know how long it would take for just one of these protein molecules to appear by chance? Roughly 10 to the 243rd power, billions of years; and I find that far, far more fantastic than simply believing in a god.
William Peter Blatty

11.
I lived in Georgetown in the late 70s about four houses down from the steps.
William Peter Blatty

12.
And the sad truth is that nobody wants me to write comedy. The Exorcist not only ended that career, it expunged all memory of its existence.
William Peter Blatty

13.
I tried to make every bit of it as creepy as I could. And I had the same response you do. I feel the same way. The hospital scenes, that procedure was so real.
William Peter Blatty

14.
God never talks. But the devil keeps advertising, Father. The devil does a lot of commercials.
William Peter Blatty

15.
Procrastination is what we often call 'resistance.
William Peter Blatty

16.
Earth is a homicide victim. We lose our children. There are wars. Disease. And God comes strolling by like a cosmic Billie Burke.
William Peter Blatty

17.
Yet I think the demon's target is not the possessed; it is us . . . the observers . . . every person in this house. And I think---I think the point is to make us despair; to reject our own humanity, Damien: to see ourselves as ultimately bestial; as ultimately vile and putrescent; without dignity; ugly; unworthy.
William Peter Blatty

18.
We use concepts like "consciousness"---"mind"---"personality," but we don't really know yet what these things are.' He was shaking his head. 'Not really. Not at all.
William Peter Blatty

19.
I'm not aware that I was consciously influenced by any director, though these things often happen unnoticed, submerged in the unconscious.
William Peter Blatty

20.
Perhaps evil is the crucible of goodness... and perhaps even Satan - Satan, in spite of himself - somehow serves to work out the will of God.
William Peter Blatty

21.
As far as God goes, I _am_ a nonbeliever. Still am. But when it comes to a devil---well, that's something else.
William Peter Blatty

22.
When the filter is weakened by a powerful drug, what we see is not delusion but the truth.
William Peter Blatty

23.
Your thoughts are too dull to entertain.
William Peter Blatty

24.
For I think belief in God is not a matter of reason at all; I think it finally is a matter of love.
William Peter Blatty

25.
Horror does not interest me, and so I know little of its practicioners, old or current
William Peter Blatty

26.
Would you like to hear a nice definition of jealousy? It's the feeling that you get when someone you absolutely detest is having a wonderful time without you.
William Peter Blatty

27.
We mourn the blossoms of May because they are to whither; but we know that May is one day to have its revenge upon November, by the revolution of that solemn circle which never stops - which teaches us in our height of hope, ever to be sober, and in our depth of desolation, never to despair.
William Peter Blatty

28.
Like the brief doomed flare of exploding suns that registers dimly on blind men's eyes, the beginning of the horror passed almost unnoticed; in the shriek of what followed, in fact, was forgotten and perhaps not connected to the horror at all.
William Peter Blatty

29.
The terror drifted over georgetown like the sun over a blind mans eyes
William Peter Blatty