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  1. Oct 5, 2024 · Guillermo del Toro (born October 9, 1964, Guadalajara, Mexico) is a Mexican director, screenwriter, and producer who is known for imbuing horror and fantasy films with emotional and thematic complexity. Del Toro developed an interest in both film and horror stories as a child. He began making short films while in high school and later studied ...

    • C. Collodi

      C. Collodi (born Nov. 24, 1826, Florence, Tuscany...

    • His Use of Practical Effects Is Off The Charts
    • He Often Draws Inspiration from His Cultural Background
    • He Knows How to Properly Build Suspense in His Horror Movies
    • Even When Guillermo Del Toro Isn't Directing, He Tells Brilliant Stories

    I mean, is anyone surprised I’m including this? Guillermo del Toro has done so much for the fantasy and horror industry in terms of practical effects, from makeup to its monsters to everything else. The first movie I always think of whenever this comes up is Pan’s Labyrinth. The dark fantasy film is stunning for so many reasons, and one of them is ...

    As a Latina who loves movies like Coco or Roma that tell Spanish stories, del Toro has always been one of my go-to's, as he embraces his culture - often returning to it to direct smaller, low-budget Spanish horror films. One of my favorites that he’s ever done is The Devil’s Backbone. This horror film is set during the Spanish Civil War, and you ca...

    Another thing I wanted to go over when it comes to Guillermo del Toro is his approach to building suspense. Oftentimes in a lot of modern horror movies, such as the Paranormal Activity franchise or even The Conjuring franchise, a lot of these movies rely on jump scares to infuse terror into the audience. While that’s all good and dandy, I really do...

    Guillermo del Toro has directed many films in his years in the movie industry, but the man is a famed writer and producer as well within Hollywood. Even when he isn’t directing films, he's able to contribute to brilliant stories that I adore watching to this day, ones that I feel can only be matched by some of the other icons of horror and fantasy ...

    • Alexandra Ramos
  2. HP Lovecraft. “Lovecraft is so important to the history of the horror genre. He created a universe of old gods and cosmic monsters and mutants – he’s incredibly influential, and I’d be a very different filmmaker without him. We’ve been trying to make a movie of [Lovecraft’s story] At The Mountains Of Madness for years.

    • Guillermo began experimenting with cameras at 8 years. Around the age of eight, del Toro started experimenting with his father’s Super 8 camera, creating short films with toys from the Planet of the Apes and other items.
    • Guillermo’s Catholic grandmother attempted to exorcise him as a child. The fact that del Toro was raised in a Catholic home caused him to disagree with his grandmother.
    • He studied filmmaking at the University of Guadalajara. Del Toro was born in Guadalajara, the son of Guadalupe Gómez and automotive entrepreneur Federico del Toro Torres, both of Spanish, Irish and German descent.Raised in a strict Catholic household, he studied at the Centro de Investigación y Estudios Cinematográficos, at the University of Guadalajara.
    • Guillermo spent 10 years as a special-effects make-up artist. He subsequently learned the art of movie makeup from legendary film makeup artist Dick Smith.
  3. Jul 13, 2021 · Del Toro puts it best in the above video essay from kaptainkristian: “If a monster stays the same throughout the film, there’s no sense of drama in the image.” And while production elements like wardrobe, color, and lighting “all exist to give oxygen” to a character’s design, these fantastic creatures only work because of how they’re woven into the story and themes of the film.

  4. Dec 20, 2011 · Guillermo del Toro: A Life in Pictures. The Mexican filmmaker behind the BAFTA-winning Pan's Labyrinth talks about his career in film. Producer and director Guillermo del Toro is one of Mexico’s most celebrated filmmakers. Since winning international acclaim for Cronos in 1993, he has given us some of the most visceral, powerful and ...

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  6. Vampires seem to play an important role in watershed moments of Latinx horror beginning of course with Drácula/Dracula and opening up the 20 th century with the release of del Toro’s Cronos. The film begins in 1536 Veracruz, where an alchemist creates a machine, the cronos, which can give people eternal life.

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