Robert Rodriguez (birthname:
Robert Anthony Rodriguez) has gained legendary status among American indie cinema mavens as the “one-man-band” filmmaker, known for taking on several key production tasks from directing to cinematography to editing to camera operating to composing.
Rodriguez is perhaps less recognized for having a stunning (and possibly unprecedented and unmatched) run of nine box-office hits in a row to start his career, but is famously the poster-boy for DIY filmmaking, exemplified by his self-made, self-financed ($7225) debut feature, the Spanish-language
El Mariachi (1992), with Rodriguez taking on nearly every filmmaking task, and casting Carlos Gallardo in the title role, and scoring a sale to Columbia Pictures and a
Toronto Film Festival premiere; the movie holds the Guinness World Record for a lowest-budgeted movie ever to gross $2 million.
Rodriguez’s next “neo-Western” and the second part of his “Mexico Trilogy” was
Desperado (1995), starring
Antonio Banderas, Joaquim de Almeida, Salma Hayek, Steve Buscemi,
Cheech Marin, and Quentin Tarantino, premiering out of competition at the
Cannes Film Festival. Rodriguez was the director while Tarantino was the screenwriter (and a cast member) of the ultra-violent vampire hit,
From Dusk Till Dawn (1996), with
George Clooney, Harvey Keitel, Juliette Lewis, and Salma Hayek. Perhaps Rodriguez’s most underrated movie (and his fourth consecutive box-office hit) is his second feature with Miramax and his first sci-fi effort,
The Faculty (1998), co-starring Josh Hartnett, Usher, Jordana Brewster, Elijah Wood, and Clea DuVall.
Robert Rodriguez launched his hugely successful kids-oriented series
Spy Kids (2001), with Alexa Vega, Daryl Sabara, Banderas, Carla Gugino, Alan Cumming, Teri Hatcher, Marin, and Danny Trejo (with guest appearances from filmmakers Mike Judge and Richard Linklater as well as George Clooney), spawning three sequels as well as an animated series. Robert Rodriguez’s first
Spy Kids sequel was
Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over (2003), with new cast members Ricardo Montalban, Holland Taylor, and Sylvester Stallone, and grossing $197 million globally, becoming the highest-grossing entry in the series.
Rodriguez continued an astonishing run of hit movies with his
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966) homage,
Once Upon a Time in Mexico (2003), the third entry in his “Mexico Trilogy,” and co-starring Antonio Banderas, Salma Hayek, and Johnny Depp. Rodriguez’s first of two
Sin City movies was yet another box-office hit,
Sin City (2005), based on the Frank Miller graphic novel (with Miller receiving co-directing credit on the insistence of Rodriguez), and starring Bruce Willis, Jessica Alba,
Benicio del Toro, Brittany Murphy, Clive Owen, Mickey Rourke, and Elijah Wood, and winning a technical prize in the Cannes Film Festival competition.
Rodriguez’s first tepidly received movie was
The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl in 3-D (2005), with Taylor Lautner, Taylor Dooley, and George Lopez, underperforming at the box office. The next unusual project for Rodriguez was his horror movie (with Rose McGowan, Freddy Rodriguez, Michael Biehn, Jeff Fahey, and Josh Brolin),
Planet Terror (2007), made to be shown on a double-bill titled
Grindhouse, with Quentin Tarantino’s
Death Proof; the release structure, especially overseas, hobbled box office. Another kids-oriented project for Rodriguez was
Shorts: The Adventures of Wishing Rock (2009), with Jon Cryer, Jimmy Bennett, and William H. Macy, which failed at the box office.
Robert Rodriguez returned to his exploitation genre roots (joining co-director Ethan Maniuis) with the hit action movie,
Machete (2010), a terrific starring vehicle for Danny Trejo (playing Machete Cortez, a more radical version of Antonio Banderas’
Desperado character and created for the
Spy Kids franchise) and co-starring Michelle Rodriguez, Robert De Niro, Lindsay Lohan, Jessica Alba, and Steven Seagal, and triggering a sequel, the far less successful
Machete Kills (2013), with new cast members Banderas, Cuba Gooding Jr., Walton Goggins, Demian Bichir, and
Mel Gibson.
Rodriguez returned to his more typical box-office hit status with the third movie in the series,
Spy Kids: All the Time in the World (2011), with Alba, Joel McHale, Alexa Vega, and Daryl Sabara. Robert Rodriguez continued to focus on sequels rather than originals with
Sin City: A Dame to Kill For (2014), based on Frank Miller’s second book in his graphic novel series, and again crediting Miller as co-director, with a cast including Alba, Eva Green, Mickey Rourke, Brolin, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Rosario Dawson, and Bruce Willis, but the movie tanked at the box office.
Rodriguez took over the directing reins from
James Cameron (who produced and co-wrote, with Laeta Kalogridis) for the commercial hit ($405 million),
Alita: Battle Angel (2019), a cyberpunk thriller based on Yukito Kishiro’s manga series starring Rosa Salazar, Christoph Waltz,
Jennifer Connelly, and
Mahershala Ali.
After the worst-reviewed and perhaps least-seen movie of his career (the autobiographical
Red 11 (2019), premiering on VOD), as well as the Netflix-released
We Can Be Heroes (2020), Rodriguez returned to traditional theatrical filmmaking as director/writer/producer with the sci-fi thriller,
Hypnotic (2023), starring
Ben Affleck,
Alice Braga,
J.D. Pardo, and William Fichtner. Rodriguez returned to the wild world of Trejo’s Machete for the sci-fi (!)
Machete Kills in Space (date to be announced), marking Trejo’s eighth performance as Machete.