Gael García Bernal (born November 30, 1978, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico) is a Mexican actor and director who became known for his work in films that portrayed men and women in taboo or nonconformist relationships.
García Bernal’s parents—his mother was an actress and his father a director—involved him in theatrical productions at an early age. In 1989 he was cast in a Mexican telenovela, and in 1996 he appeared in the short film De tripas, corazón (“Take Courage”). When he was 17 years old, García Bernal traveled to Europe and won a scholarship to the Central School of Speech and Drama in London. In the middle of his studies, he returned to Mexico to film Amores perros (2000; “Love’s a Bitch”) with director Alejandro González Iñárritu. García Bernal’s performance as a poor teenager who turns to dogfighting to finance an affair with his sister-in-law won rave reviews and launched his career. Amores perros was nominated for an Academy Award for best foreign-language film and brought García Bernal to the attention of another acclaimed Mexican director, Alfonso Cuarón, who cast the young actor as a colead in the coming-of-age film Y tu mamá también (2001; “And Your Mother Too”). The movie, which followed two adolescent boys and an older woman on a road trip through Mexico, aroused controversy with its frank depiction of the sexual relationship between the three primary characters.
García Bernal’s next major role came in El crimen del padre Amaro (2002; The Crime of Padre Amaro), in which he played a priest who falls in love with and impregnates a 16-year-old girl. The film garnered record box-office sales in Mexico and was nominated for a best foreign-language film Academy Award, but García Bernal’s risqué turn led to threats of excommunication from the Roman Catholic Church. The protests did little to affect García Bernal, who called himself “culturally Catholic, but spiritually agnostic,” and he continued to take on challenging and potentially contentious roles, such as a young Che Guevara in Diarios de motocicleta (2004; The Motorcycle Diaries), a sexually abused altar boy in Pedro Almodóvar’s La mala educación (2004; Bad Education), and a murderous and incestuous loner in The King (2005). His turn in the eclectic comedy La Science des rêves (2006; The Science of Sleep) showed that García Bernal was also adept at exploring the lighter side of human nature.
In 2007 García Bernal directed his first feature film, Déficit (“Deficit”), and the following year he starred in Blindness—a film adaptation of José Saramago’s novel Ensaio sobre a cegueira (1995; Blindness)—and Rudo y Cursi (“Tough and Corny”), which centred on two brothers who play professional football (soccer). His subsequent films included the social drama Mammoth (2009), Jim Jarmusch’s The Limits of Control (2009), the romantic comedy Letters to Juliet (2010), and the politically provocative También la lluvia (2010; Even the Rain), in which he portrayed a besieged movie director.
In 2011 García Bernal starred in the romance A Little Bit of Heaven and in the intimate thriller The Loneliest Planet, about a couple whose relationship is tested on a hike through the Caucasus. The following year he appeared opposite Will Ferrell as a fearsome drug lord in Casa de mi padre (“My Father’s House”), a send-up of telenovelas. In No (2012) he portrayed a real-life Chilean advertising consultant whose work on a 1988 television campaign was credited with influencing the results of a national referendum that effectively ended the rule of dictator Augusto Pinochet. In the biopic Rosewater (2014), directed by comic Jon Stewart, García Bernal played journalist Maziar Bahari, who in 2009 was arrested by Iranian officials after covering election protests and detained for 118 days on charges of espionage.
García Bernal then portrayed an illegal Mexican immigrant who, after crossing the border, is hunted by a murderous vigilante American (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) in Desierto (2015). He then starred in Neruda (2016) as an inspector chasing the Nobel Prize-winning poet Pablo Neruda. García Bernal later lent his voice to the animated film Coco (2017), about a boy who goes on a journey through the Land of the Dead to uncover his family’s long-kept secret. His roles from 2018 included a poetry instructor in The Kindergarten Teacher, an artless thief who breaks into Mexico City’s National Museum of Anthropology in Museo, and a talk show host in Acusada (The Accused). Among García Bernal’s credits the following year were Ema, about a couple struggling after a failed adoption, and Wasp Network, a thriller involving Cuban spies. In M. Night Shyamalan’s Old (2021), the actor portrayed a vacationer at a secluded beach where visitors age quickly. Also in 2021 García Bernal starred as Zorro in Z.
García Bernal continued to occasionally appear on television, and he notably starred as a conductor in Mozart in the Jungle (2014–18), a comedy set in the world of classical music. For his performance, García Bernal won a Golden Globe Award in 2016. He later cocreated and starred in the political drama Aquí en la Tierra (2018– ; Here on Earth). In the postapocalyptic miniseries Station Eleven, Bernal was cast as a movie star who dies shortly before a pandemic ravages the world.