RG: No, I don’t. I think he’s somebody who’s seen too many movies. He’s confusing his life for a film, and he’s made himself the hero of his own action film. He’s just kind of lost in the mythology of Hollywood.
AVC: Why do you think his day job as a Hollywood stunt driver isn’t enough for him?
RG: I think that he’s psychotic, but he’s not a psychopath. He’s a myth as well, you know? We tried to treat the film like a fairy tale, like Los Angeles is this fairy-tale land based on fantasies, and he’s the knight in his mind and Irene [Carey Mulligan] is the damsel in distress. Bernie Rose [Albert Brooks] is the evil wizard, and Ron Perlman’s the dragon he needs to slay.
http://www.avclub.com/articles/ryan-gosling,61833/
NWR: "He's more half machine, half man. And those two worlds conflict because he doesn't know how to transform himself into one or the other until he realizes that he has to blend himself into becoming a superhero, which he was always meant to be."
http://www.npr.org/blogs/therecord/2...do-the-feeling
Also, din eseul ala, inca o perla hermeneutica care dezvaluie mecanismul simbolisticii si metaforei in film. O parere despre, are cineva? Eu il cred.
Given the scorpion symbolism and the confusion of bad guys and good guys, it’s interesting that Bernie emerges as the Driver’s double, their two shadows eventually blending together during the film’s final violent confrontation. They transcend flesh, and are linked by film mythology.
Originally Posted by Mercutio:
bai nene, ti-am scris o replica, m-am invartit prin casa dupa alte chestii, am raspuns la un telefon, si cand am apasat pe submit replay n-a mers afacerea, am pierdut tot ce scrisesem.
mi-e lene sa scriu din nou. lasa ca-ti spun eu alta data. 
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n-a mers cu back? incearca sa-ti amintesti mereu sa selectezi si copiezi textul inainte de a submite postul (dar, pe langa asta, ar trebui sa mentionez ca asa gestioneza zeii uneori destinele celor care vor sa ma contrazica

)