Ryan Gosling quotes:

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  • I grew up in a family of strong women and I owe any capacity I have to understand women to my mother and big sister. They taught me to respect women in a way where I've always felt a strong emotional connection to women, which has also helped me in the way I approach my work as an actor.

  • I'm waiting to get old - I think old guys with tattoos look good.

  • I loved growing up in Canada. It's a great place to grow up, because - well, at least where I grew up - it's very multicultural. There's also good health care and a good education system.

  • I sometimes forget to have breakfast in the morning, but when I actually buy a box of cereal, I will probably eat it not only for breakfast but also as a snack later on.

  • I never was that boy who loved gangster films, but when I was growing up, I was obsessed with the detective Dick Tracy. It was one of my favourite movies as a kid, and he really inspired me. I would have loved to be part of that golden age of Hollywood in the 1940s. It made me want to become an actor.

  • I did this scene in 'Lars and the Real Girl' where I was in a room full of old ladies who were knitting, and it was an all-day scene, so they showed me how. It was one of the most relaxing days of my life.

  • It's not good just to have life experience of film-making and that's all. It's hard to play a real person when you've been in jets and town cars for three years.

  • I love being Canadian. I think growing up in Canada gives you a world perspective that I certainly enjoy.

  • I grew up in a family of strong women, and I owe any capacity I have to understand women to my mother and big sister.

  • There's good things about going to church.

  • There is this idea in Hollywood, and I've seen it work for people, where the unspoken rule is 'Do two for them and one for yourself.' And that's kind of considered a fact. I've never really found that to be true for me. I've gotten more opportunities out of working on things I believed in than I ever did on things that weren't special to me.

  • I think that you can sort of have your own personal journey and you know, you can just kind of apply that to whatever characters you're playing.

  • I did put on weight for the last half of the film, but the Ferris wheel scene was shot with a harness on me so that if I fell I wouldn't fall all the way.

  • I don't even think of myself as particularly good looking, and not at all a typical kind of Hollywood leading man sort of actor.

  • I am pretty sick with myself! It seemed a pretty good idea at the time. Around the time I turned 30, I started to feel very creative, more creative than I had been before which is good and I like that.

  • I try to play characters who are different from myself, so I feel like this character is someone who is really different. I actually think that if I did what he did in this movie, I would get a restraining order put against me.

  • For me, I sort of felt like it was kind of a fairytale... but an interesting one. I don't know of anybody who has had a romance quite like this, but I certainly know people who have stuck it out.

  • Hollywood usually doesn't have strong woman in films like that, and it's stupid, so for the most part they're usually being directed and written by men.

  • I always wanted to entertain. When I was six, a scrawny, scrawny kid, Id get in my red speedo and do muscle moves. I actually thought I was muscular. I didnt know everyone was laughing at me.

  • I just sort of take it from a character perspective, and I don't know if he was necessarily spiritual, but I do think he had hope. He was a character that was comfortable having hope in his life, and hope is faith.

  • I don't know, I just got a feeling about her. You know when a song comes on and you just gotta dance?

  • I have a friend that is a WWII buff, and we sat and talked a lot about stuff like the war and the reasons behind it, and you now it's all in the uniform. Once you're in it, it usually does all the work for you.

  • I'm glad I have an outlet. I don't think I would put my aggression elsewhere, but working on the projects I have worked on, you tend to benefit personally from trying to wrap your head around the way other people look at the world.

  • There's a lot of pressure to be the lead of a film. I have done it. It's not my favorite way to work.

  • For now, I'm just going to keep doing the work and hope I don't get fired. If people want to put me up on their walls, I'll love it.

  • The theme for me is love and the lack of it. We all want that and we don't know how to get it, and everything we do is some kind of attempt to capture it for ourselves.

  • I like all kinds of movies, I love movies; and I always wanted to try and make one.

  • Im glad I have an outlet. I dont think I would put my aggression elsewhere, but working on the projects I have worked on, you tend to benefit personally from trying to wrap your head around the way other people look at the world.

  • If the character is true, the movie will fall into place. Or at least that's what you hope.

  • Women aren't interested in being sexy any more and men are. All the guys have objectified themselves and sexualised themselves into being just matinee idols.

  • I feel it's important to show that one thing that you do doesn't define you as a human being. It doesn't mean there aren't ramifications or you shouldn't pay for that but its not who you are.

  • I went through puberty in a theme park. I'm grateful. That place was a landscape to me. I had adventures every day.

  • If I eat a huge meal and I can get the girl to rub my belly, I think that's about as romantic as I can think of.

  • As a kid I decided that a Canadian accent doesn't sound tough. I thought guys should sound like Marlon Brando. So now I have a phony accent that I can't shake, so it's not phony anymore.

  • Sometimes I think that the one thing I love most about being an adult is the right to buy candy whenever and wherever I want.

  • I think about death a lot, like I think we all do. I don't think of suicide as an option, but as fun. It's an interesting idea that you can control how you go. It's this thing that's looming, and you can control it.

  • If you do one good thing, that doesn't define you either. Being around the kids in the juvenile center, they were engaging, they made us laugh but they were there for doing something terrible.

  • I've learned it's important not to limit yourself. You can do whatever you really love to do, no matter what it is.

  • I grew up Mormon. I wasn't really Mormon, my parents were.

  • I always wanted to entertain. When I was six, a scrawny, scrawny kid, I'd get in my red speedo and do muscle moves. I actually thought I was muscular. I didn't know everyone was laughing at me.

  • I like working with actresses, and I like women a lot, not for obvious reasons, but just in that that there's so much about what they bring to the scene that keeps it so interesting. Their instincts are so different, and they never explain them to you.

  • I try not to discriminate against genres.

  • I don't like to be entertaining. I don't like the feeling of being entertaining. If there was a musical or a comedy that was not just for entertainment but was rooted in something I could relate to on a real level, then I think I would do it.

  • I don't like the process of meeting someone and you make a film and that's it. You think you're just getting started, and then it's over.

  • I felt like I was going crazy as a kid. I wanted to be man, get a job.

  • If I have any particular appeal to women, maybe it's because I listen more than other guys do and appreciate how they think and feel about things.

  • [mannerism is when] you think you have all these great ideas, and none of them are good at the end of the day. But while you are pursuing those other things subconsciously happen.

  • A lot of people when they make movies, the actors act like it's their journey and that everyone is on the set to facilitate their journey and the whole thing is set up that way - they ask if you want anything.

  • Acting isn't that hard, really. I mean, I think that people make a big deal about it, but you just kind of try to say your lines naturally.

  • All my characters are me. I'm not a good enough actor to become a character. I hear about actors who become the role and I think 'I wonder what that feels like.' Because for me, they're all me.

  • Cars can have a hypnotic effect. You can get in a car and get out and not really remember the trip.

  • Freedom is such a gift.

  • I dont feel like I would be a good mentor. I dont know what I have to offer in that respect. I do this for pretty selfish reasons.

  • I don't know what art is exactly, but I'm pretty sure it's not something you get paid to do. For myself acting is a job. I think it's easier to get better at it if you don't lose your identity in it. You do whatever you can to try to understand the character. Because they're paying you feel like you should be doing something.

  • I don't think anyone can teach you how to be a man but a woman. You only learn by learning what they need.

  • I don't think you can discriminate against budgets, you know? I'm an actor, I guess, so I'm just trying to play as many characters as I can. If there's a character I think I can play, and they're going to let me do it, I'll do it whether it's $10 or $1 million or more.

  • I feel it's important to show that one thing that you do doesn't define you as a human being. It doesn't mean there aren't ramifications or you shouldn't pay for that but, its not who you are.

  • I feel like everything has happened naturally.

  • I feel there is something nice about not talking. Like you can say more by actually saying less.

  • I just have my own taste, and I just try and stick with that. I'm just trying to play as many characters as I can for as long as I have an opportunity to.

  • I know there are only so many characters I'll be able to play.

  • I like working with actresses, and I like women a lot, not for obvious reasons, but just in that that theres so much about what they bring to the scene that keeps it so interesting. Their instincts are so different, and they never explain them to you.

  • I started reading all these men's magazines, trying to follow all the tips: what you're supposed to wear, what you're supposed to have, things you're supposed to say, and all the exercises you're supposed to do.

  • I think everybody should act! I would encourage everybody to do one thing, join a theater class or something. It's so good to take a character that you think is wildly different from who you are, and to try to relate to that person and become that person is very helpful. It's hard to articulate what you learn, but you can feel the effect of these characters that you play and take with you.

  • I think it's more interesting to see people who don't feel appropriately. I relate to that, because sometimes I don't feel anything at all for things I'm supposed to, and other times I feel too much. It's not always like it is in the movies.

  • I think we just knew that we had a movie when Rachel walked in the room.

  • I think we're very complicated and we're capable of all kinds of things, and movies don't reflect that.

  • I tried to find something real in essentially something thats science fiction or something-for me, anyways-not having an experience like this.

  • I turned 30 and everyone told me I would feel different and I didn't. So I thought I'd move to New York.

  • I've been lucky, so lucky, working with [...] Rachel (McAdams) on The Notebook. A big draw for me, when I do a film, is who am I going to be opposite, because there's only so much I can do on my own.

  • If you're making a movie about the effects of time, you kind of have to engage time as the main character.

  • I'm attracted to films that have strong female characters because there are strong female characters in my life.

  • I'm Canadian so American politics are not really in my wheelhouse.

  • I'm Canadian. I think that's it. When you're a Canadian, you're always watching America from the outside, from afar.

  • In New York, you're forced to deal with life; it's there in front of you on a daily basis.

  • In some way, the relationship between a director and an actor is personal.

  • It was more important to me to understand what its like to be this Jewish kid who felt he was so different at such a young age. I feel the story is about a kid who came to hate through love, so I felt I had to learn why he loved this thing so much that he also apparently hated it.

  • It's misogynistic in nature to try and control a woman's sexual presentation of self. I consider this an issue that is bigger than (one) film.

  • I've been doing this since I was 12... I don't want to act much longer; I can't do one thing my whole life.

  • On his character Dean in Blue Valentine: It's sad, because he just doesn't have any ambition outside of loving his wife and his daughter, which should be enough but doesn't seem to be enough in this case.

  • Parents' tolerance of violence is so different to their tolerance of sexuality. If violence is involved in the sexuality it's somehow perceived as entertainment, but if love is involved with sexuality it's seen as pornographic and is not acceptable.

  • Talking about muscles. They're like pets basically. They're not worth it. You have to feed them all the time and take care of them, and if you don't, they just go away. They run away.

  • The problem with Hollywood is that nobody works. They have meals. They go to Pilates. But it's not enough. So they do drugs. If everybody had a pile of rocks in their backyard and spent every day moving them from one side of the yard to the other, it would be a much happier place.

  • The thing that's so exciting when you're making a film is that it can be anything and there are no limitations on it.

  • To watch a master work at anything is a privilege.

  • You can't make a movie for everybody. You can't go into it trying to alienate people, but you have to assume that you're going to.

  • You have to question a cinematic culture that preaches artistic expression, and yet would support a decision that is clearly a product of a patriarchy-dominant society, which tries to control how women are depicted on screen. The MPAA is okay supporting scenes that portray women in scenarios of sexual torture and violence for entertainment purposes, but they are trying to force us to look away from a scene that shows a woman in a sexual scenario, which is both complicit and complex. It's misogynistic in nature to try and control a woman's sexual presentation of self.

  • You know how sometimes department stores have these things where, if you win, you get 10 minutes to go in and take anything you want from the store? That's basically what I'm doing. I'm running in and just trying to grab as many characters as possible before they pull the plug on me.

  • You know us crazy kids. We'll do anything crazy to our hair.

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