'Best place to make movies': Toronto presents Guillermo del Toro with key to the city | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
Subscribe

Would you like to subscribe to our newsletter?

Current Conditions Mostly Cloudy  24.9°C

'Best place to make movies': Toronto presents Guillermo del Toro with key to the city

Eoin Egan (Cinespace Studios), left to right, Guillermo del Toro, Miles Dale, Magali Simard (Cinespace Studios) are seen in this handout photo, at Cinespace Studios Marine Terminal Campus near Toronto’s waterfront, after del Toro received a key to the city from Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow on Thursday, July 24, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - Sam Santos for Cinespace Studios (Mandatory Credit)
Original Publication Date July 24, 2025 - 9:11 AM

TORONTO — Toronto has handed Oscar-winning director Guillermo del Toro the key to the city in recognition of his affinity for making films here.

Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow presented the Mexican-born filmmaker with the ceremonial honour Thursday morning, saying his history of producing films in Toronto has created jobs and supports a local screen industry.

In accepting the key, del Toro said he loves Toronto and considers it “the best place to make movies.”

The presentation took place at the waterfront Cinespace Studios, which says it's renaming four sound stages to pay tribute to the "Shape of Water" writer-director.

Del Toro says he's spent about half of his 30-year career making movies in Toronto, including 2013's effects-laden action film “Pacific Rim” and 2017's fantasy “The Shape of the Water,” which netted Oscars for best director and best picture.

Next up is his Netflix film “Frankenstein,” featuring Jacob Elordi as the titular monster, which Del Toro says will be finished at the Toronto video production studio Company 3.

"Frankenstein" is bound for the Toronto International Film Festival in September.

“I have loved Toronto for so many years and I am very happy that it loves me back,” del Toro said during the ceremony.

“It does not only exist as a great city for making film, but for celebrating film,” he said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 24, 2025.

News from © The Canadian Press, 2025
 The Canadian Press

  • Popular kelowna News
  • Why Okanagan Lake doesn't freeze anymore
    Don Knox remembers not only skating on a glassy smooth Okanagan Lake as a young child, but also on a nicely frozen Mission Creek. “When we were kids – I can’t remember the
  • Judge locks bank accounts of Okanagan business owner, suspected drug supplier
    An Okanagan man suspected of using his car dealership and mortgages to hide drug money had his bank accounts frozen by a judge. He's one of three people included in the order as the prov
  • Where to get weird and exotic snacks in Kelowna
    Arabic malt energy drinks, protein Snickers bars, an edible Barbie dream house, Snoop Dogg chips; if any of those exotic snacks pique your interest there are places to get them in Kelowna. S
  • The free life — and lives — of Dag Aabye
    This feature first ran on iNFOnews in April of 2017. VERNON - For much of the year, home for Dag Aabye is a portable garden shed that he carried, in pieces, halfway up a mountain to a remo
  • Slippery slide: The decline of the Okanagan's waterslides
    They were once a mainstay of an Okanagan summer, where kids could burn off steam running back up the hill for another adrenaline-inducing ride down their favourite waterslide, while their parents
View Site in: Desktop | Mobile