Pinocchio Director Wants More Greta Thunbergs In The World

Guillermo del Toro was inspired by the poise and thoughts of Greta Thunberg to make Pinocchio a film modern kids will enjoy.

By Mark McKee | Updated

Guillermo del toro's pinocchio

When Guillermo del Toro embarked on the journey to create a new version of Pinocchio, he demanded they do it with no notes from the studio and no preview. He believed that having no studio oversight would liberate the artists involved, and what he ended with was a dark story about death and father-son relationships. According to a report covered by Variety, instead of worrying about what some imaginary kid would think of this movie, he instead believes that the world needs more children like Greta Thunberg. 

The 20-year-old Swedish activist was recognized for her activism in 2018 when she was in school before gaining world renown for her speech at the climate change summit in 2019. She was then awarded the Gulbenkian Prize in 2020, earning her $1.15 million, which she, in true form, donated to charity. The activist picked up more steam with her ongoing Twitter feud with men’s rights activist Andrew Tate, which may or may not have lead to his arrest in Romania.

But why does the legendary director want more Greta Thunbergs in the world? She was a big reason why del Toro wanted to do the movie without studio notes; he uses her as an example of who children are today and why studio notes are more harmful than helpful. In his explanation, del Toro explains that studios think of children as skateboarders in suburbia, protected by soccer moms but misunderstood because they are more like the climate change activist. 

“Normally the kids they think about in studios are skateboarding kids in suburbia, but a kid now is Greta Thunberg. A kid now knows that the doomsday clock is ticking.”

Guillermo del Toro, explaining how different kids are today

He says that Greta Thunberg is representative of who children are today and how they are aware of the reality of the world around them. They have faced death (thanks, primarily, to the pandemic) in ways that recent generations haven’t had to, and they see the difference between the world that parents present to their children and the world those children experience outside their locked doors. He says they know we have destroyed ecology, and there is one thing they want. 

Guillermo Del Toro Pinocchio
Guillermo del Toro

Greta Thunberg led the charge when asking for, or rather demanding, what they wanted, an explanation. While many Western leaders were present while the activist scorned them for their lackluster attitudes towards the climate crisis, social media enabled the rest of her generation to begin echoing her sentiment and demand accountability. Guillermo del Toro seems to believe that there is more value in her words than do many of the talking heads who criticized her as a political stunt. 

Who knows whether politicians and people who control policy will actually listen to her or her generation, but there is one thing that Greta Thunberg proved without a doubt — one voice can make a difference. Her speech was short, pointed, and impassioned, and it began a movement within her younger age group to take action against the effects created by the generations before them. Of course, you may just watch Pinocchio and take it as a darker version than the Disney story, but if del Toro has his way, parents will see it as a way to start listening to their children more and allowing them to see the real world.