
Writer/Director/Producer/Director of Photography
Production Designer/ Editor/Visual Effects Supervisor/Sound
Designer/Re-Recording Mixer/Composer
While a student at
the University of
Texas at Austin in
1991, Robert Rodriguez wrote the script to his first feature film while
sequestered at a drug research facility as a paid subject in a clinical
experiment. That paycheck covered the cost of shooting his film. He
planned to make the money back by selling the film to the Mexican home
video market.
The film was “El
Mariachi” (1993), which Rodriguez wrote, directed, photographed, edited
and sound-recorded – for $7,000. While shopping it to the video market,
Rodriguez signed with a powerful agent at ICM. Columbia Pictures then
bought the rights and signed Rodriguez to a two-year writing and directing
deal. “El Mariachi” went on to win the coveted Audience Award for best
dramatic film at the Sundance Film Festival, and was honored at the
Berlin,
Munich, Edinburgh, Deauville and Yubari (Japan) festivals. “El Mariachi”
became the lowest budget movie ever released by a major studio and the
first American film released in Spanish. Rodriguez wrote about these
experiences in Rebel Without a Crew, a book published by Dutton
Press.
Although it
was an astonishing debut for a 23-year-old, Rodriguez was already a
seasoned filmmaker. The third of ten children born to Cecilio and Rebecca
Rodriguez in San Antonio, Texas, he had prepared for film production
classes at UT by making a series of his own home movies. Family members
were recruited as cast and crew. His three youngest siblings starred in
“Bedhead” (1991), a 16 mm short film which was honored at many national
and international festivals. Rodriguez also blossomed as a cartoonist at
UT with “Los Hooligans,” a comic strip in the Daily Texan featuring
characters based on his brothers and sisters.
Rodriguez went
on to write, produce, direct and edit “Desperado” (1995), a sequel to “El
Mariachi,” for Columbia. The film introduced American audiences to
Antonio Banderas as a leading man, opposite Salma Hayek. Rodriguez also
wrote, directed and edited “The Misbehavers” again starring Antonio
Banderas in 1995, one of the four segments of Miramax Films’ “Four
Rooms.” He then teamed up with Quentin Tarantino on the outrageous “From
Dusk Till Dawn” (1996) for Dimension Films. Rodriguez directed a cast
including Tarantino, who wrote the script. He also edited the film and
served as executive producer. Rodriguez’s next directorial project was
Dimension Films’ “The Faculty”(1998) starring Josh Hartnett, Elijah Wood
and Jordana Brewster.
In 2001,
Robert fulfilled a lifelong dream and created the family adventure film.
“Spy Kids,” a critically acclaimed and box office success, went on to
break 100 million domestically. He followed that with “Spy Kids 2: The
Island of Lost Dreams,” which won rave reviews and “Spy Kids 3-D: Game
Over,” which hit theaters July 25th, 2003.
The third
installment to the “El Mariachi” trilogy, “Once Upon a Time in Mexico” was
released on September 12, 2003, which Robert shot, chopped and scored
himself.
He also served
as writer of this film.
Rodriguez and
his wife, producer Elizabeth Avellan, make their home in Austin, Texas
where they live with their three sons.