
This Cultural Life Guillermo del Toro
Jan 15, 2026
Guillermo del Toro, the acclaimed Mexican filmmaker known for his masterful blend of fantasy and horror, shares his artistic journey with John Wilson. He delves into his conservative upbringing in Guadalajara and the contrasting bohemian influence of his mother. Del Toro discusses how personal traumas and a love for monsters inspired his films' child protagonists and themes of creation and suffering. He also reflects on the challenges of making personal projects, his disdain for AI in art, and his upcoming stop-motion film, The Buried Giant.
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Childhood Between Faith And Bohemia
- Guillermo del Toro describes growing up in Guadalajara between strict Catholicism and a bohemian father after a lottery windfall.
- He recalls moving to a huge house where children could avoid adults for weeks, shaping his outsider perspective.
Mortifying Practices And Childhood Fear
- Del Toro recounts his great-aunt making him wear upside-down bottle caps in his shoes to atone so his feet would bleed.
- He says his mother later discovered and stopped the practice, but the fear of death stayed with him as a child.
Catholic Imagery Fuels Visual Language
- Del Toro connects Catholic pageantry and Baroque imagery to the visceral, gory stories that fuel his imagination.
- He cites martyrdom statuary and crucifixion imagery as recurring visual motifs in his films like Frankenstein and Pan's Labyrinth.














