The film arch-narrative is driven by a fictional character, the Synth Rider (also referred to as Synthrider, without spaces), created by Spanish director
Iván Castell in 2015 and played by Spanish actor Rubén Martinez. He is a lonely driver who time-travels in a
DeLorean from the 1980s, with the mission of preserving the legacy of its masters: the electronic pioneers Giorgio Moroder, John Carpenter, Vangelis, and Tangerine Dream, among others. The character first appeared on the crowdfunding campaign video that started in April 2016 on Kickstarter. That campaign failed, but the character re-appeared in a second campaign video (as the leader of the #LaResistance movement), on Indiegogo. He is the side-protagonist in the feature film, time-travelling—from one influential decade to the previous one—in a DeLorean, guided by the voice of the narrator. As journalist Ben Beaumont-Thomas described in
the Guardian review of the film: "Carpenter is employed as a sensei-like narrator, recording his observations on to a cassette tape to be taken back in time by a Gosling-type pretty-boy street punk driving a DeLorean". The director created the Synthrider "as an homage of the Mad Max's Night Rider character and
Ryan Gosling in Drive" and as a "metaphor of the time travel backward that most people experience when they discover this subculture. He is the artists, fans, music, films, all together in one person – with a kickass
They Live neck tattoo". French journalist Nicolas Plomee points out another reference to the 1980s classic film
Back to the Future: "The reference to Back to the Future (1985) from Robert Zemeckis is accentuated by those scenes, half-way into
Drive (2010) from Nicolas Winding Refn, (...) and
Mad Max (1979) from George Miller, where the character drives a DeLorean." Being a re-adaptation of a longtime archetype used in the retro scene—the lone night rider driving an 80s sports car—the character was well received by
synthwave fans, and the term Synthrider was adopted organically by the community as a way of referring to themselves as synthwave fans, and it began to appear as a hashtag on Twitter and Instagram profiles in 2016. Director Iván Castell declared that the character wasn't supposed to be in the final film, he was originally created for a mood trailer as a way of catching the attention of film producers. The idea was then reused in the first crowdfunding campaign and worked so well, that he decided to integrate him in the film. ==Reception==