Gigi Saul Guerrero

Gigi Saul Guerrero (born February 27, 1990) is a Mexican-Canadian filmmaker and actress.[1][2] She gained recognition for creating and directing the 2017 horror web series La Quinceañera.[3] In 2019, she directed episodes of The Purge and the anthology horror series Into the Dark. [4]

Gigi Saul Guerrero
Guerrero at Comic-Con 2019
Born (1990-02-27) February 27, 1990
EducationEarl Marriott Secondary School
Alma materCapilano University
Occupation
  • Filmmaker
  • actress
Years active2011–present
WebsiteLuchagore Productions

Guerrero has been praised as one of the top emerging directors in the horror genre by Empire,[5] Dread Central,[6] Bloody Disgusting[7] and Creators.co.[8] Variety described her as part of the new wave of Latino talent.[9]

Early life

Guerrero was born on February 27, 1990 in Mexico City, Mexico. She immigrated to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada at the age of 13.[10][11] She grew up in White Rock, British Columbia and graduated with Honors with a B.A. in Motion Picture Production from Capilano University.[1] As a child, she stole a VHS of Child's Play from Blockbuster but was too scared to finish watching it.[12]

Career

2011–2018: Career beginnings

Guerrero met two of her early collaborators, Cinematographer Luke Bramley and Producer Gordon Cheng, while studying film at Capilano University in 2009.[13] Guerrero and Bramley were in the same class and bonded over a shared love of horror while Cheng was in the year below them.[14] In 2011, they collaborated on her directorial debut, the short film Dead Crossing, about zombie border guards eating Mexicans crossing into the United States.[15] Guerrero stated she loved the overall experience of film school because it taught her how to be a professional.[14][2] She co-founded the production company Luchagore Productions along with Bramley, Cheng and Producer Raynor Shima in 2013.[13]

In 2014, she participated in the anthology series México Bárbaro.[16] It was the first short production made under Luchagore Productions, and Guerrero's final film school project.[14] Her segment Dia de los Muertos premiered at the 2014 Etheria Film Night.[17] After viewing Dia de los Muertos, author Shane McKenzie approached Luchagore with adapting his novel, Muerte Con Carne.[2] Later that year, Guerrero directed the adaptation of McKenzie's work, El Gigante, and distributed it in partnership with Raven Banner Entertainment.[18][19][20] The success of El Gigante led to it being adapted into a graphic comic in English and Japanese.[21]

A development executive at Warner Bros. contacted Guerrero upon viewing El Gigante, which led to Luchagore pitching several ideas, one of which became La Quinceañera.[22] Two of her shorts, Slam and Testament, created as entries in film competitions Dead on Film and Phrike Film Fest respectively, picked up awards for Best Death (Testament) and Best Picture (Slam).[11]

Her music video, Paloma, was the opening video for 2015 Morbido Fest.[23] El Gigante featured at Melbourne's 2015 Monster Fest and Sydney's 2015 A Night of Horror International Film Festival, and won the Jury Award at the 2016 Macabre Faire Film Festival.[24] Her next short, Madre de Dios, starring Tristan Risk, received praise for its design and screened at the 2015 Fantasia International Film Festival.[25][26]

In 2016, she won the Artistic Innovation Award from Women in Film and Television Vancouver.[27] Also in 2016, she directed a segment, M is for Matador, for the horror anthology film ABCs of Death 2.5.[28] In 2017, her short film Bestia, was praised for its style and psychological horror.[29] It won Best Short Film at the Blood in the Snow Canadian Film Festival.[30]

Guerrero's next production was announced as "Project Lucha".[12] The story emerged from talks between McKenzie and Guerrero, centred around a girl becoming a strong woman.[31] In October 2017, the project was revealed as La Quinceañera, a launch title for Stage 13, the digital content division for Warner Bros. Digital Networks.[32] It features Mia Xitlali and Bertila Damas and held its world premiere at the Morbido Film Festival on October 28.[3] It won the Golden Skull Award for Audience Favourite at the festival.[33] In 2018, La Quinceañera debuted on the Studio+ app for Canal+ territories.[34] In June 2018, it screened at Grauman's Chinese Theatre for the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival.[22] Dread Central praised La Quinceañera for its characters, noting its depiction of strong women as leaders.[35]

Guerrero wrote a video game for Capcom, which was to be announced in 2018.[30] In January 2018, she hosted the Vancouver Short Film Festival, which closed with a screening of Bestia.[36] She teaches directing at Vancouver Film School.[37]

2019–present: Breakthrough

In 2019, Variety selected her as one of the "10 Latinxs to Watch."[38] She directed an episode of the horror anthology series Into the Dark for Blumhouse, and voiced Vida in Super Monsters.[39] Guerrero received the job for the latter from Blumhouse after criticizing the original script for not being authentically Mexican.[40] Guerrero insisted upon casting actors who were of Mexican descent and would switch between directing in English and Spanish while on set.[41] To create a greater intensity for the finale, most of the episode was shot in chronological order.[42] Guerrero's episode for Into the Dark, titled Culture Shock, premiered at the 2019 Etheria Film Night.[43] In reflecting the current migrant situation in American, Guerrero stated it was "everybody’s horror story."[44] Culture Shock, was critically acclaimed, garnering 100% approval on RottenTomatoes, with some critics calling it the best in the series.[45][46]

La Quinceañera screened as part of the 2019 Vancouver Women in Film Festival.[47] In September 2019, she signed a first-look film and television deal with Blumhouse.

In October 2019, Screen Gems signed her to direct an untitled studio feature film based on the mythology of Santa Muerte, with a script by her frequent collaborator McKenzie.[48] In January 2020, it was announced Guerrero was hired by Orion Pictures to direct the horror thriller 10-31, to be produced by Eli Roth, however Orion decided not to move forward shortly after.[49][50]

Personal life

Guerrero is inspired by horror that is new and unique and believes that story is the most important element to a movie. She uses humour to ease tension. Her self-described style is, "gritty, gory" with a, "Tex-Mex" feel.[24] She cites seeing a re-release of the director’s cut of The Exorcist in theatres when she was nine as having an influence on her. Guerrero counts among her inspirations "The Three Amigos of Cinema" (Guillermo del Toro, Alfonso Cuarón and Alejandro G. Iñárritu) in addition to Robert Rodriguez, Rob Zombie and Quentin Tarantino.[51]

Filmography

Film

Year Film Director Writer Producer Editor Notes
2014 Barbarous Mexico Yes Yes Yes No Segment: "Día de los Muertos"
2016 ABCs of Death 2.5 Yes No No Yes Segment: "M is for Matador"
2018 Bloody Bits: Shorts Compilation Vol. 2 No Yes No No Segment: "Madre De Dios"

Acting roles

Year Title Role Notes
2014 Shooting: The Musical Mia
2018 The Perfect Pickup Biker Girl
2019 Puppet Killer Brooke
2019 Funhouse Ximena Torres

Television

Year Film Director Writer Producer Editor Role Notes
2011 Choose Your Victim Yes Yes Yes Yes Boom Op 8 episodes
2017 La Quinceañera Yes Yes No No Stripper #1 7 episodes
2019 Into the Dark Yes Yes No No Paola Episode: "Culture Shock"
2019 The Purge Yes No No No N/A Episode: "Hail Mary"

Acting roles

Year Title Role Notes
2015 Untold Stories of the E.R. Bree Episode: "Cop Shocker"
2015 Average Dicks Party Girl Episode: "Rap Culture"
2015 Diagnose Me Young Mother Episode: "Covered in Bugs"
2015–2018 Nina's World Rosita / Senorita Arana / Rosie (voices) 8 episodes
2016 The Switch Isabelle 2 episodes
2016 The Wilding Spanish Teacher Television film
2017 Inconceivable Britney 3 episodes
2019 Siren Petty Officer Nina Lopez 2 episodes
2018 Take Two Carlina Del Rio Episode: "Smoking Gun"
2018–2019 Marvel Super Hero Adventures Spider-Girl (voice) 2 episodes
2018–2019 Super Monsters Vida (voice) 7 episodes

References

  1. Browne, Alex. "White Rock filmmaker is horror's rising star". peacearchnews.com. Peace Arch News. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  2. Neurotica, Hannah. "Transgressive Brilliance: Emerging Filmmaker Gigi Saul Guerrero Talks 'Gore, Babes, and Blood.'". Ax Wound. Retrieved 5 November 2017.
  3. Mack, Andrew. "Morbido 2017 Review: LA QUINCEANERA, Luchagore's Action Web Series Packs Emotional Punches". ScreenAnarchy. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  4. D'Alessandro, Anthony. "Blumhouse Signs Gigi Saul Guerrero To First Look Film & TV Deal". Deadline. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
  5. Sánchez, Jonathan. "Five Latin American directors of horror films to which we must pay attention". Empire. Retrieved 25 November 2017.
  6. Gelmini, David. "See the Madre de Dios Trailer". dreadcentral.com. Dread Central. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  7. Wash, Tony. "WORLD OF DEATH EP3 – "Trust" / "Misfortune"". bloody-disgusting.com. Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  8. Brinn, Steven. "The Bye Bye Man's Stacy Title and 6 Women Keeping Horror Alive". Creators.co. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  9. Hopewell, John. "'Amateurs,' 'Paradise Hills,' 'Kiken' Set for Austin Fantastic Market". variety.com. Variety. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  10. Segura, Eduardo Gutiérrez. "Gigi Saul Guerrero, la visión femenina y poderosa del horror". Milenio (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-03-01.
  11. MESSADO, TENIEL. "In Her Room Gigi Saul Guerrero". HushMagzzine.ca. Hush Magazine. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
  12. Bagley, Victoria. "WIHM8 - INTERVIEW WITH "LA MUÑECA DEL TERROR" GIGI SAUL GUERRERO". ttf13.com. 13th Floor. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  13. Slaughter, Sandra. "INTERVIEW: Gigi Saul Guerrero talks LUCHAGORE PRODUCTIONS". bloodbathandbeyond.tv. Blood Bath and Beyond. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  14. Rqoh, Zena. "After Midnight - Gigi Saul Guerrero". Real Queen of Horror. Retrieved 13 March 2017.
  15. "Dead Crossing – Short Film and Interview". zombiesdrule.com. Zombies Drule. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  16. Garcia, Eric. "MEXICO BARBARO Exclusive Interview: Six Directors, Including Lex Ortega And Isaac Ezban, Talk Horror Anthology". screenanarchy.com. Screen Anarchy. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
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  19. Koval, Alina. "Celebrating National Canadian Film Day with Genre Films!". WIFTV. WIFTV. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
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  26. "MONTREAL PREMIERE". Fantasia Festival. Fantasia Festival. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
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  28. Shotwell, James. "'The ABCs Of Death 2.5' showcases the next generation of horror masters". substreammagazine.com. Substream Magazine. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
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  31. Corona, Jonathan Sánchez. "Morbid Fest 2017: Interview with Gigi Saúl Guerrero about La Quinceañera". MundoMorbido. Retrieved 5 November 2017.
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  33. Ortiz, Cesar Huerta. "La Mexicana Que Asusta Warner Bros". El Universal. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  34. Writer, Staff. "Action-Horror Series 'La Quinceañera' Debuts on Stage 13". Latin Heat. Retrieved 30 March 2018.
  35. Dixon, Zena. "Fantasia 2018: LA QUINCEAÑERA Review – Gigi Saul Guerrero Brings Body Bags to LA QUINCEAÑERA". Dread Central. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  36. Donnelly, Lauren. "Vancouver Short Film Festival showcases homegrown talent". Vancouver Weekly. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
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  48. Fleming Jr, Mike. "Screen Gems Sets Pic Based On Santa Muerte Mythology; Gigi Saul Guerrero To Direct Horror Film". Deadline. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
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