I mean, did you really believe that this latest incarnation of "Hellboy" would actually be better than the two excellent Guillermo del Toro films we got back in '04 and '08? Of course not.
Read moreGuillermo del Toro Writes About The Brilliant Simplicities of ‘Roma’
Alfonso Cuaron's “Roma” is the undisputed champ of 2018 when it comes to critics awards. It won the Critics' Choice Awards best picture prize last night, adding to its tally which included theNew York Film Critics Circle, the Los Angeles Film Critics Association and the Chicago Film Critics Association. Cuaron's fellow Mexican filmmaker, Guillermo del Toro, has called "Roma" one of his top five favorite movies of all time and took to Twitter last night to further expand on his love for the film by launching his 10 personal observations about “Roma.”
Read moreGuillermo del Toro’s top movies this year
Guillermo del Toro Says Spielberg’s ‘Catch Me If You Can’ is the Most Underrated Movie Ever Made.
The first time I saw Steven Spielberg’s cat-and-mouse flick "Catch Me If You Can," I knew it was destined to become a classic. Of course, over the years, when you talk about Spielberg's best films you will have people name-checking the usuals, such as “Saving Private Ryan,” “Schindler’s List,” "Close Encounters of the Third Kind," and "Minority Report." But “Catch Me If You Can”? Almost never mentioned.
Read moreGuillermo del Toro Directing ‘Pinocchio’ for Netflix
Guillermo del Toro has no doubt been given free reign to do whatever he'd like after his follow-up to the Oscar-winning “The Shape of Water.”
According to THR, del Toro has signed on with Netflix to write, direct, and produce a stop-motion version of his long-time passion project, “Pinocchio.”
Read moreGuillermo del Toro convinced Alfonso Cuaron to direct "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban"
It is not surprising that the best, most expertly made movie of the 'Harry Potter' franchise is "The Prisoner of Azkaban." All credit must go to the best director to have ever helmed a Potter movie: Alfonso Cuarón. The director of "Children of Men," "Gravity" and "Y Tu Mama Tambien" used his visual, errrr, wizardry in the 2004 movie to make something unmistakably unique. This is when the Potter books got dark, grittier and went a completely different direction.
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