Follow us on Google News
Get the latest updates directly in your Google News feed
Guillermo del Toro is a film director renowned in the movie industry for his stellar world-building, as his films grow from the sketchbooks that he fills with ideas for interesting creatures and places.

Del Toro’s status as a versatile and groundbreaking director comes from his work such asPan’s Labyrinth, Hellboy, Pacific Rim, and The Shape of Water.
The Shape of Waterhelped him bag 3 Oscars for Best Directing, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Motion Picture in the year 2018. While most of his ideas come from monster flicks and horror movies, some of them actually come from anime as well.

Del Toro’s love for anime stems from Ghibli films and Hayao Miyazaki
The Hollywood director is a massive fan of anime and manga. It has significantly shaped his cinematic pursuits, evident through successful live-action films like “Hellboy” and the inspiration drawn fromNeon Genesis Evangelionfor “Pacific Rim”.
After taking a glimpse of his bookshelves and work desk, it’s safe to classify him as a “weeb”.

As fans would recognize from the books he owns,Guillermo Del Torois a massive fan of Ghibli films.
While writing about Studio Ghibli co-founder Hayao Miyazaki, Del Toro revealed that the man’s works admittedly shaped his childhood. He has watched not onlyHayao Miyazaki-san’s films from Ghibli but also his works at Toei Animation. Now that’s an old-school fan!

I discovered Hayao Miyazaki’s Toei Animation films as a child-films like The Wonderful World of Puss ‘n Boots and series like Heidi and Marco, in which his style and influence became increasingly identifiable. Encountering My Neighbor Totoro as an adult, my mind snapped back to those earlier works, and I recognized how much this man had shaped my childhood.
The director had watched anime since his childhood days in Mexico. And the kind of titles he checked out were the same as any kid growing up in Japan.

“He really was inspired by Japan”: Gundam Super-fan Guillermo del Toro Based One of the Most Badass Pacific Rim Jaegers on Zeon Army
That means, he kind of had an idea of how many projects Japan pump out back in those days. But what he didn’t expect is that number would double or triple in the later years.
Del Toro’s main concern for the modern-day anime industry
At the time,the director was asked if he still keeps up with anime. Despite the medium’s massive growth, Del Toro says he tries to keep up with its newest entries. However, he struggles hard in the process because there are so many titles coming in every season. Something fans from the current generation face as well.
I try. Anime is too big. It’s thousands of titles. I stay with the artists I love, Katsuhiro Otomo, Hideshi Hino, Naoki Urasawa. I’m not aware of super-new manga. Even the ‘new’ stuff I like, like Gantz, or Blame!, is a few years old.
This actually poses a problem for new anime fans, as they wouldn’t be able to recognize which show is which, because, according to some of them, a lot of anime from a particular genre feels the same. That’s because modern-day animators tend to copy old stuff and repackage them as new.
“They just watch anime and copy what they hear”: Original Goku Voice Actress Masako Nozawa isn’t a Big Fan of New VAs Despite Some of the Best Performances in Recent Years
Nevertheless, Del Toro’s love for anime had him try making a live-action adaptation ofMonsterby Naoki Urasawa and have it greenlit by HBO. Unfortunately, despite having drafted a few episodes, his idea was met with resistance and failed to take off as hoped.
However, Del Toro remained optimistic despite HBO’s rejection and concentrated on finding additional potential platforms willing to host his adaptation.
Monsterby Naoki Urasawa is now available to watch on Netflix.
Anand Bhaskaran
Articles Published :134
A Dragon Ball fanatic who also loves to read and talk about Indian spirituality. An MBA finance graduate with a passion for doing everything that is unrelated to it. Anand has over 4 years of experience under his belt, having worked with leading content heads in the anime community. Currently, he’s more into Slice of Life and Romcom shows than actual Battle Shonen. But unfortunately, he’s stuck with a job writing ONLY about Battle Shonen (smh).
More from Anand Bhaskaran
“Every Leaf Ninja here is an idiot”: Kurenai Getting Unnecessary Hate in Naruto for Fighting Itachi is Downright Sexist for a Good Reason
First Look at Minato’s One-Shot’s Anime Adaptation Would Make Naruto Fans Forget Studio Pierrot Has No Hand in It
Dragon Ball: Toyotarou Can Revive a Non-Canon Villain That Makes Goku Black Look Like Amateur Hour
Recommended
Good Boy Director Explains How He Made His Dog Act in 2025’s Most Inventive Horror Movie
The Terminal List: Dark Wolf: Luke Hemsworth Reveals Marvel Link That Sneaks Into His Dark Wolf Role
The Batman 2: Is Zoë Kravitz Not In the Robert Pattinson Starring Sequel? Reports
17 Years Later, This Iron Man Scene Was the Darkest MCU Moment No One Realized
When Is Absolute Flash #6 Coming Out? Release Date, Plot Prediction & Everything We Know
‘The Serial Killer’s Apprentice’: How Dean Corll Was Murdered by His Own “Friend”
anime industryGuillermo del Toro