Gary Alazraki
Gary "Gaz" Alazraki is the writer and director of Mexico's record breaking comedy Nosotros los Nobles (2013) and the co-creator, executive producer and director of Club de Cuervos (2015), Netflix's first original series in Spanish. He heads Alazraki Entertainment, a Mexico City based production company focused on high-quality entertainment for general audiences in Latin America and Hispanic USA.
Background and education
Born and raised in Mexico City, Gary "Gaz" Alazraki went to the American School Foundation in Mexico City. He studied a year in Boston and did the second half of his college education at the University of Southern California. His grandfather was prominent Mexican filmmaker Benito Alazraki, and his father Carlos Alazraki Grossman went on to work in television for many years before he opened his own advertising agency, Alazraki and Associates Advertising, in 1977, the same year Gary was born.
Gary Alazraki began his studies of communications at the Ibero-American University in Mexico City, but after going on to take an eight-week summer program at the New York Film Academy, he transferred to the USC School of Cinematic Arts to pursue a career in film and television.[1]
Early career
Gaz chose to acquire on-set experience by working on big productions in the advertising industry, while doing short films on the side. He worked as assistant director for filmmaker and commercial director Alejandro González Padilla, where he got his first break directing commercials for blue chip companies in Mexico.[2]
In 2004 he opened his own production company, Agave Shots, in partnership with Pitipol Ibarra and under the mentorship of Simón Bross, where they continued directing commercials for the advertising industry. In the same year he directed Volver, volver (2005), his first important short film which caught the interest of upcoming local stars Jaime Camil, Martha Higareda, Tony Dalton as well as Oscar nominee and Palme D'Or winner Guillermo Arriaga who invited Gaz to direct La hora cero (2008), a short film he was producing for Terra Films, a project Lucas Akoskin put together. It was part of an experiment where Arriaga wanted to see how different directors would direct the same six pages he wrote.[3]
Nosotros los Nobles
In 2008 Gaz and Pitipol closed Agave Shots, and Gaz began working on the screenplay for Nosotros los Nobles (2013). In March 2013, the film was released with distribution by Warner Bros. With 650 prints, Nosotros los Nobles (2013) was the biggest release for a Mexican movie in history. Nobles doubled the record for highest grossing Mexican film in history, with 7.2 million viewers and $340 million pesos in box office sales, after El crimen del Padre Amaro (2002) had held the top position for eleven years.[4][5]
It also became the 16th highest grossing film in history of all films played in Mexican territory, and stayed in the top-10 charts for seventeen weeks, won Best Movie by iTunes Store Mexico, and garnered the highest grossing home video sales in Mexican history, outperforming Hollywood films.
Club de Cuervos
Gaz teamed up again with Luis Gerardo Méndez on Club de Cuervos (2015), an original idea he co-created with Michael Lam. Netflix bought the pitch in 2014 with the idea of making their first Spanish-speaking original series, produced in Mexico for the world. The first season consists of thirteen episodes, twelve of which Gaz directed and edited.[6]
Partial filmography
- Club de Cuervos (2015-)
- The Noble Family (2013)
- Volver, volver (2005, Short film)
References
- ↑ González, Susana. "Gary, la reivindicación de un Alazraki". Quien. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
- ↑ "Gary Alazraki". Alazraki Films. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
- ↑ "Gary Alazraki". Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
- ↑ "Nosotros los nobles: un éxito inesperado". Forces México. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
- ↑ "2013 Mexico Yearly Box Office Results". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
- ↑ Spangler, Todd. "Netflix Comedy 'Club de Cuervos' Starts Shooting in Mexico". Variety. Retrieved 7 February 2016.