A Life in Pictures: Guillermo Del Toro
08 July 08
From Cronos and Mimic to the Hobbit and Hell Boy II, Mexican filmmaker Guillermo Del Toro talks to Jason Woods about his remarkable career.
Supported by The Farm Group
There is beauty, poetry and moments of immense power in horror...
Producer and director Guillermo Del Toro is one of Mexico’s celebrated filmmakers. Since winning international acclaim for Cronos in 1993, Del Toro has given us some of the most visceral, powerful and intelligent films in modern cinema.
Before the release of his latest project Hell Boy II, Guillermo visited the Academy to speak to writer, film critic and programmer Jason Woods.
Watch him discuss his career highs and lows, from his early relationship with Mexican film institute and winning in Cannes (for Cronos) to working in Hollywood and the emotional power of horror movies. "I believe that magic exists ... the way we see the world we transform it, from the inside out. Every single act - pain, joy - is absolutely our own making," he says.
The webcast includes clips of Del Toro’s most-celebrated films - Cronos, Mimic, The Devil’s Backbone, Pan’s Labyrinth, The Orphanage - and ends with his plans to direct Tolkien's The Hobbit, a story he describes as his "enduring passion".
A Life in Pictures
The Academy's A Life in Pictures strand of events explore a major and distinctive contribution to the artistic development of the film form, enabling audiences to hear first-hand from a creative force in the industry.
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