ANDREW Garfield says making the latest Spider-Man blockbuster has left him feeling disillusioned.
The 28-year-old Brit, previously best known for The Social Network, plays the superhero in The Amazing Spider-Man.
But he told the Radio Times that he dreamt of returning to âsimpler timesâ of âstruggling... auditioning and getting turned down and wondering if Iâm ever going to get another job.â
Garfield said that he had âlost a bit of innocenceâ thanks to his high-profile Spider-Man role.
âTo achieve what you set out to achieve and realise itâs not what you want, itâs disappointing,â he said.
âThis role had been something Iâd always, always wanted to do. Then you realise itâs like any other acting job.
âSome days itâs great, others you feel lost. And Iâd always felt that if I got certain roles then Iâd be set for life, emotionally, professionally. It would be Utopia.
âBut you never get to Utopia ,â he said, adding: âThe dream has become reality.â
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Garfield, who in the past has admitted buying pirate copies of previous Spider-Man films because he was so desperate to see them before they hit the cinema, said that producers now handed him roles as a short-cut to get their movies made.
âIt seems flattering but it isnât. Itâs like: âAre you kidding me? I canât actually play a 50-year-old black, male prostituteââ, he said.
âI wasnât offered that... but itâs scary, being treated so nicely. Maybe itâs seductive if you believe in it. I donât, I see it for what it is.â
The actor, who was bullied at primary school, said that playing 17-year-old high school geek Peter Parker âwasnât actually much of a stretchâ.
âItâs a horrible time of your life. But I still feel like Iâm in that chapter. Iâm unsure, insecure, awkward in my body,â he said.
âI definitely havenât shed that skin. I still feel like I am my past.âÂ
The star, whose father is Amer ican and mother is from Essex, said: âI used to be very competitive.
"Now Iâm not sure thereâs any such thing as winning.â
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