‘I Am Frankelda’ Directors On How Guillermo Del Toro Influenced Their New Stop-Motion Film

Prince Herneval (voice of Arturo Mercado Jr.) and Frankelda (Mireya Mendoza) in "I Am Frankelda."NetflixLittle did brothers Roy and Arturo Ambriz know that nearly two decades after Roy emailed Guillermo del Toro for advice, the iconic filmmaker would champion their stop-motion animated work, including the new film I Am Frankelda.“I sent the email to him 17 years ago before I started filmmaking. I took the same course that he took with Dick Smith, the makeup FX artist from The Exorcist, when he was younger,” Roy Ambriz recalled in a Zoom conversation, alongside Arturo Ambriz, on Wednesday. “So, I wrote fan mail to show him the work that I was doing at that time and he answered back."ForbesGuillermo Del Toro On His Lifelong Quest To Create ‘Frankenstein’What began as correspondence between the Ambriz brothers and del Toro turned into a mentorship that has continued to I Am Frankelda and beyond — resulting in opportunities the filmmakers never could have dreamed about 17 years ago.“Now that we’ve finished the film, that relationship has grown a lot stronger,” Roy Ambriz noted. “He invited us to go with him to London when he was doing the score at Abbey Road Studios for Frankenstein with Alexandre Desplat, and then he invited us to go with him to Canada when he was doing the sound mixing of Frankenstein. We have learned a lot from him.”HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA - MAY 30: (L-R) Directors Arturo Ambriz and Roy Ambriz attend the premiere of "I Am Frankelda" during the 25th edition of the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival at TCL Chinese Theatre on May 30, 2026 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Michael Tullberg/Getty Images)Getty ImagesWritten and directed by the Ambriz brothers, I Am Frankelda (Spanish title: Soy Frankelda), which is a prequel film to their 2021 stop-motion series Frankelda’s Book of Spooks, premieres on Netflix on Friday. Set in 19th-century Mexico, I Am Frankelda follows a young writer, Francisca Imelda (voiced by Mireya Mendoza), who has a clear gift of writing dark tales but is discouraged by everyone but her dying mother to put the soul that is the ink of her pen to paper.As an 18-year-old, Francisca — frustrated by those who are trying to suppress her voice after her mother’s passing — combines her first and last name and dubs herself “Frankelda.” From there, Frankelda takes a trip from the Realm of Existence to her subconscious and the Realm of Terror, where the monsters she created in her mind and given souls on paper have come to life.Existing as a spectral figure in the Realm of Terror, Frankelda encounters Herneval (Arturo Mercado Jr.) — a prince trapped between the world of dreams and nightmares — who is trying to restore balance between the fictitious and real-world realms before they collapse.ForbesHow Guillermo Del Toro Pays Tribute To Boris Karloff In ‘Frankenstein’If the plight of the young writer who creates monster tales sounds familiar, it’s not a coincidence that the Ambriz brothers rooted the motivation of the title character in I Am Frankelda in the real-life story of Mary Shelley, who at age 18 wrote the landmark novel, Frankenstein. Because she was a female writer, Shelley wasn’t initially credited as Frankenstein’s author when it was first published in 1818, and had to wait five years until her name could became attached to the novel in 1823. Since then, Shelley’s classic story has been adapted for the screen hundreds of times — including del Toro’s Oscar-nominated feature iteration released by Netflix in 2025.“We started playing with the idea of, ‘What would have happened if Mary Shelley was born in Mexico? Would it have been easier with it having more difficult [for her to publish Frankenstein]?’ and our conclusion was, “I think that it would have been impossible for her to publish her work, so she would have to come back as an angry ghost,” Arturo Ambriz explained.Prince Herneval (voice of Arturo Mercado Jr.) and Frankelda (Mireya Mendoza) in "I Am Frankelda."NETFLIX“She’s filled with frustration and creativity, so that’s the character we wanted — an angry ghost,” Roy Ambriz added. “We didn’t really try to make a movie about Mary Shelley’s works or life, but about her essence as a woman writer, young, full of energy and full of creativity, and wanting to challenge the entire world and be able to write her own stuff.”In a wonderful twist of fate, I Am Frankelda and del Toro’s Frankenstein were both released on the same day in Mexico, on Oct. 23, 2025.“It was a big phenomenon here in Mexico. It was like an event when Barbie and Oppenheimer were released, and everybody was going to watch both films on the same day,” Roy Ambriz enthused. “Fans started creating artwork in which Frankenstein and Frankelda were interacting, so it was a blast. We had a toast with Guillermo for both of the Franks.”HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA - MAY 30: (L-R) Director Guillermo del Toro participates in a Q&A with directors Roy Ambriz and Arturo Ambriz at the premiere of "I Am Frankelda" during the 25th edition of the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival at TCL Chinese Theatre on May 30, 2026 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Michael Tullberg/Getty Images)Getty ImagesGuillermo Del Toro’s Work Getting ‘Pinocchio’ Made Was A Big Learning Experience For The Ambriz BrothersWhile the stars perfectly aligned for the simultaneous release of Frankenstein and I Am Frankelda on the same day in Mexico in October 2025, it wasn’t the first time fortune favored the Ambriz brothers in their work with Guillermo del Toro.During del Toro’s decade-plus development process for his stop-motion masterpiece Pinocchio — which was released by Netflix in 2022 and went on to win an Oscar for Best Animated Feature — the filmmaker helped guide Roy and Arturo Ambriz to the release of their 2016 stop-motion short.“When we started making our first short film, called Rebellious (which was released under its Spanish title, Revoltoso) — it’s on YouTube, he was very supportive of it and helped us fund it," Arturo Ambriz recalled. Procustes (voice of Luis Leonardo Suarez) in "I Am Frankelda."Netflix"[At the same time], we talked a lot about Pinocchio. He described how they built the puppets and how he was pitching it around … so we were very happy that we were both doing stop-motion at the same time. When Pinocchio came out, we absolutely loved it. It was so fresh,” the filmmaker added.While del Toro and the Ambriz brothers’ work differ in style, Arturo Ambriz noted that there’s no doubt that their mentor’s work influences what they’ve done and continue to do.“Guillermo loves the micro expressions, and he's a master of that area, but we went a little bit more with replacement faces, which are a little more cartoonish,” Arturo Ambriz observed. “So even though the outcomes are different, he has been teaching us a lot from his experience, all the things that work and the things that don't work. So, our next film will be like a synthesis of what we made with Frankelda, but also with what Guillermo has taught us, so it will be very different. We are currently making it, and it’s turning out beautifully.”‘I Am Frankelda’ Is Mexico’s First Stop-Motion Animated FeatureProduced by Roy and Arturo Ambriz’s Mexico City-based studio Cinema Fantasma, I Am Frankelda — which contains a handful of musical numbers and an end title song — is a landmark release in that it’s Mexico’s first-ever stop-motion feature film release.Lucky for the brothers, they didn’t feel the enormous weight of being groundbreakers out of the gate because of the extensive amount of time it takes to produce a stop-motion animated film.Forbes‘Michael’ Poised To Break ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ Record After Crossing $900 Million At Box Office“When we started it, we didn’t know if we were going to be the first ones or not, so our major responsibility was not just whether it would be the first stop-motion Mexican film, but also our first film,” Roy Ambriz said. “We were really afraid because we didn’t know what we were doing, but we also think that it helped us. If we had known all the things that were going to happen, like the debts that we’d have in order to make this film and all the hours that were needed for it to be done, I think maybe we would have said, ‘Oh no, let's not do it until we are a little bit more prepared.”During the making of I Am Frankelda, however, Roy and Arturo Ambriz realized what it was that got them to that point and a promise they made to their mentor.“We started doing it as a passion and as a dream we have, and also at some point, Guillermo told us, ‘Promised me that you are not going to quit,’ and we promised him that,” Roy Ambriz said. “So, that also helped us to go to the end.”Forbes‘Disclosure Day’ Rotten Tomatoes Reviews Say Spielberg Alien Tale Is Out Of This WorldNow that I Am Frankelda is here and is indeed Mexico’s first feature-length stop-motion film, they hope their work — just like Guillermo del Toro’s work did for them — inspires future artists.“In the end, we have this great honor [of it being a first for Mexico], and we really hope that these films help other Mexican artists in order to produce their own films,” Roy Ambriz said.Rated PG, I Am Frankelda is streaming on Netflix.Coming soon: Roy and Arturo Ambriz discuss how the work of stop-motion film luminary Tim Burton inspired their work on “I am Frankelda.”Forbes'Project Hail Mary' MGM+ Streaming Date Switches Up Amazon's SVOD Release Strategy
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