Guillermo del Toro is among the most creative and visionary artists of his generation whose distinctive style is showcased through his work as a filmmaker, screenwriter, producer and author. Born in Guadalajara, Mexico, del Toro first gained worldwide recognition for the 1993 Mexican-American co-production Cronos, a supernatural horror film, which he directed from his own screenplay after beginning his career working as a special effects makeup artist. The film premiered at the 1993 Cannes Film Festival, where it won the Mercedes-Benz Award. It also won over 20 international awards, including eight Ariel Awards from the Mexican Academy of Film, including Best Director, Best Screenplay, and the Golden Ariel.
He then directed and co-wrote the supernatural thriller The Devil’s Backbone, which along with Cronos has appeared repeatedly in Top Ten lists of the best genre films of all time.
In 2004, del Toro directed and co-wrote the action adventure sci-fi thriller Hellboy starring Ron Perlman in the title role. Four years later, he wrote and directed the hit sequel, Hellboy II: The Golden Army.
Del Toro earned international acclaim as the director, writer and producer of the 2006 fantasy drama Pan’s Labyrinth. He was honored with an Oscar nomination for his original screenplay for the film, which received five additional Oscar nominations, including Best Foreign Language Film, and won Academy Awards for Art Direction, Cinematography, and Makeup. In all, the film garnered more than 40 international awards and appeared on more than 35 critics’ lists of the year’s best films.
In 2013, del Toro wrote and directed the epic sci-fi action-adventure Pacific Rim starring Charlie Hunnam and Idris Elba, which has grossed over $400 million worldwide. He also created the Couch Gag for the 24th annual Treehouse of Horror Halloween episode of The Simpsons, which garnered over 20 million views on YouTube.
His most recent feature is the Gothic Romance Crimson Peak, which he co-wrote with Matthew Robbins for Legendary and Universal Pictures. The film, which was released in October, 2015, stars Mia Wasikowska, Tom Hiddleston, Jessica Chastain and Charlie Hunnam.
Del Toro executive produced the worldwide horror hit Mama, starring Jessica Chastain. Among his other film credits, del Toro produced the supernatural thriller The Orphanage, which became the highest-grossing local language film in Spain’s history. In addition, he partnered with fellow Mexican directors Alfonso Cuaron and Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu to produce Rudo Y Cursi, directed by Carlos Cuaron and Biutiful written and directed by Inarritu. He is co-screenwriter with Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens and Peter Jackson of the three Hobbit films for New Line Cinema.
On the animation front, del Toro, through his overall deal with DreamWorks Animation, has been an executive producer on the films Kung Fu Panda 2, Puss in Boots and Rise of the Guardians. Among his upcoming animation projects are Puss in Boots 2 and Kung Fu Panda 3 and his for DreamWorks Animation. He produced the The Book of Life, for Fox Animation and ReelFX,. He is also developing and will co-direct an adaptation of Carlo Collodi’s Pinocchio, as a 3D, stop-motion feature, which he will produce with The Henson Company.
Del Toro has also turned his attention to publishing. With novelist Chuck Hogan, he co-authored the vampire horror novel The Strain, which was published in June 2009 by William Morrow. They have since collaborated on The Fall and The Night Eternal, which make up The Strain Trilogy. All three books debuted as The New York Times top-ten bestsellers. In 2015, Hyperion Press published Trollhunters, a fantasy-adventure novel co-written by Del Toro and Daniel Kraus. The book will be the basis for a Del Toro-produced animated television series for DreamWorks Animation.
Del Toro and Hogan are also the creators of FX Networks’ hit series based on The Strain novels. Del Toro directed the opening episode of the first season and also serves as an Executive Producer on the series, which current in production on its third season. Dark Horse Comics has published a graphic novel series adapted from the trilogy.
In 2013, Harper Design published Guillermo del Toro Cabinet of Curiosities, a lavishly illustrated book containing notes, drawings, and untold creatures from del Toro’s private journals and filmmaking diaries, with never-before-seen characters, art, and ideas of things to come.
In addition, Del Toro is currently developing a television series based on Naoki Urasawa’s acclaimed manga series Monster, with producers David Zabel, Don Murphy, Susan Montford and Gary Ungar.
Del Toro is represented by Exile Entertainment and WME.