Ranking Every Guillermo Del Toro Film From Worst To Best

10. Pacific Rim (2013)

Working with his largest budget to date, del Toro delivered this rock 'em, sock 'em, monster mash with aplomb. It tells the tale of a post-apocalyptic world, in which monsters known as Kaiju have risen up from the depths of the ocean, only to be confronted by Jaegers, the gargantuan, mechanized creations of man. This allowed del Toro to pay deep homage to both the Japanese monster movies of the fifties and sixties, as well as more modern Japanese anime.

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The film is at its strongest when its neck-deep in action. Del Toro films the fights between the robots and monsters like a kid set loose with the largest action figures in the world and that sense of lunacy bleeds through. His keen eye for spectacle is as evident as ever and there's a remarkable clarity to the sequences that was distinctly lacking from most action films of the time.

Having said all of that, this is a visually interesting film without much of a heart. It gets stuck with an unconvincing lead in Charlie Hunnam's Raleigh and we're just never given enough to invest in. There are certainly hints of a better film, such as Mako's flashback, which is prime Toro filmmaking, but overall, amidst the CGI glitz and cliche story structure, the characters get a bit lost and the film suffers for it.

Also, the film takes on some strange parallels to the nineties films of one Roland Emmerich, which is just uncomfortable in every way. Nobody needs a tribute from del Toro to the man who ruined Godzilla.

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