Hellboy' Director Guillermo Del Toro Credits Mexican Heritage for His Artistic Vision

by urbano411 | July 11, 2008 at 07:33 pm
551 views | 10 Recommendations | 3 comments
Guadalajara, Mexico, native Guillermo del Toro often gets asked if he considers himself simply a filmmaker, an independent filmmaker or a Mexican filmmaker.

"How could I not be a Mexican filmmaker? If I endeavored not to be, I would not succeed because I was raised in Mexico. I heard all the legends. I drank all the drinks. I ate all the foods. I walked on the streets. The idiosyncrasies of my country are in me, not in my passport, not in my sense of geography. They are in my gut, in my head, everywhere," del Toro says during an interview at the Four Seasons Hotel to discuss his new movie "Hellboy II: The Golden Army."

And this Mexican director has taken the American film world by storm. His 2006 offering "Pan's Labyrinth" is the highest-grossing Spanish-language movie of all time in the United States. He's also been the guiding hand behind the film version of very American comic books like "Blade" and the two "Hellboy" movies.

The director, who with his well-trimmed beard and stout shape looks like a distant cousin of American filmmaker Kevin Smith, has been able to capture this attention through a filmmaking style that has pushed the limits of imagination through a surreal cast of creatures.

In "Hellboy II" the creatures range from a hand-size killing machine versions of the Tooth Fairy to the multi-armed Fluid Vendors. He's created so many bizarre characters for his new movie they often get lost in the crowd.

It is his Mexican heritage, so says del Toro, that planted the seeds for such imaginative work.

"There is a tradition in Mexico of craftsmanship that is called creating alebrijes. Alebrijes are mythical creatures that belong to no particular mythology or set of beliefs," del Toro says. "The are fanciful five-headed dragons with the tail of a dog and the body of a cow. It doesn't matter. They come straight from the brain of the artisan creating them.

"It is a culture that loves the bizarre. We love these monsters. We love creating them. The very act of doing them is the artistic gesture."

He compares the cultural obsession with creating these creatures to Medieval Masons carving gargoyles in a cathedral.

Toss in the influences of Mexican literature by Juan Rulfo, Agustin Daniels, Juan Jose Arreola and Jose Emilio Pacheco, plus the writings of Jorge Luis Borges, Oracio Quiroga and Julio Cortazar, and you have formula for what made del Toro the director he has become.
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Pat Garcia
Pat Garcia
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 21:18 on July 11th, 2008

urbano411, I like this story. It's good stuff. My daughter's favorite! She plans to study engineering digital design for visual effects.

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Jordan Yerman

El Espinazo del Diablo (The Devil's Backbone) is still my favorite of his films- they guy's visual/narrative imagination is just amazing. I

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Jordan Yerman

Also, Cronos, which is del Toro's debut. The best mechanical-insect-vampire movie ever made. Also, it features Ron Perlman, who would go on to work with del Toro many more times.

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