INTERVIEW - Page 2

GUILLERMO
DEL TORO

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Interviews Monica J. O'Rourke Interview and Report by
Monica J. O'Rourke
Guillermo Del Toro
SHOULD YOU?
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GUILLERMO DEL TORO: THIS IS MINE - 2001

"As adults I think we tend to idealize childhood as something like a Care Bears cartoon."
- Guillermo del Toro

Feo Amante's Under the Microscope:
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Guillermo del Toro
by Monica J. O'Rourke

Del Toro speaks

After the movie, Del Toro resumed his place at the front of the audience for a laid-back Q&A session that offered even more insight into the mind of this brilliant director.

The concept of The Devil's Backbone was born sixteen years earlier, although Del Toro explained that about two and a half years ago he came across another screenplay (by two Spanish writers: Antonio Trashorras & David Muñoz) with similarities to his original idea. He bought the screenplay from them, fused it with his ideas, and a third draft was born. The concept of using the Spanish Civil War was his own, something he seems quite proud of.

Why a movie about orphans? In 1997, Del Toro's father was kidnapped and held for seventy-two days. They paid the ransom and got his father back, which Del Toro says made him appreciate the fact that his parents are still alive.

The Ghost Child
Del Toro says of the ghost child:
"I wanted him to be haunting yet beautiful."

He said it was time for him to do a movie about, "what it is to be alone in the world as a child, and celebrate the movie for myself the fact that I still have parents, instead of doing it as a memorial. Let them enjoy it a little bit too."

The child's ghost is one of the most disquieting parts of the film, and Del Toro uses water in a most visually disturbing way. "The thing I thought about the water was, since the child had died in the water it would be really almost magical, because the ghost was supposed to be kind of beautiful to look at."

Fernando Tielve, who played young Carlos in the film, . . . was offered the lead in the movie, something that made him and his mother quite happy as they were having financial problems.

Del Toro

Again Del Toro succeeded, creating a mysterious, beautiful ghost that was both terrifying and compelling. "In so many ways, the movie tries to deal with the ghost of something from the life of the kids, a ghost of something that you lost, something that haunts you, something that you never did." It is a metaphor for the ghosts that haunt one's life, a universal understanding of fear.

Los Olvidados

Were the images of violence toward children too disturbing for America audiences? American movie-goers tend to shy away from anything too graphic where children are concerned. Del Toro discussed Los Olvidados, a 1950 movie about a group of violent juvenile delinquents living in the festering slums of Mexico City, which deals with the corruption of youth.

Del Toro says, "What I loved about Los Olvidados was that it portrayed childhood as a mixture of innocence and rebellion. That's exactly what (childhood) is for me. As adults I think we tend to idealize childhood as something like a Care Bears cartoon." Del Toro contends that universally, audiences who have seen The Devil's Backbone are reacting favorable, and are connecting strongly with the film.

More than five hundred children auditioned for the movie. Del Toro searched for youngsters "really eager to do the job, intelligent, with a quality that related to the character." Fernando Tielve, who played young Carlos in the film, initially auditioned as an extra, but after a lengthy interview and an opportunity to read lines, was offered the lead in the movie, something that made him and his mother quite happy as they were having financial problems.

Del Toro feels close to his films, feels that they are a part of him that he eagerly shares with his audiences. However, perhaps revealing the closeness he feels to his art, he adds with a laugh, "The Devil's Backbone - this is mine. If any one of you doesn't like it, tough shit. There will always be someone who will. This is my movie in that sense, because whatever in the film is criticized, it's like my personality - some people like it, some people don't."

Del Toro and poster
Del Toro's next personal project will be competing in the
Harry Knowles
look-alike contest.

Up next for Del Toro is Blade 2, a movie he jokingly describes as "an escapist, explosive movie that has nothing to do with the real world. It's about a guy that dresses like a leather freak and slices vampires at night. Which has nothing to do with the horror we're living right now."

Scene from Blade 2
The "Leather Freak" dishes out a bit of the old "Ultra-Violence"

And after that: "Mephisto's Bridge, another personal movie. I'd like to make one to one (one personal, one mainstream)". Mephisto's Bridge is the story about a yuppie designer who makes a deal with the devil in order to get the girl of his dreams. Written and directed by Del Toro, with Martin Scorsese as Executive producer.

The overall response from the crowd attending the screening was one of enthusiasm and excited anticipation. Not since The Others (also notable, perhaps not so coincidentally, as another Spanish film triumph) has a crowd so fully appreciated a subtle ghost story told in such a remarkable way. If Del Toro continues on this trend, we may have another Tim Burton on our hands, perhaps another Scorcese, in terms of commercial success and audience appreciation. Losing Del Toro to the masses would be a loss for those aficionados of true art-house films but

First posted on December 19 , 2001

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Researcher David Waldron, references my review of UNDERWORLD in the Spring 2005, Journal of Religion and Popular Culture entry, Role-Playing Games and the Christian Right: Community Formation in Response to a Moral Panic (downloadable pdf).

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