Producer, director, screenwriter and editor, by full name Carlos Reygadas Castillo. He became interested in film as a teenager, watching films of Andrei Tarkovsky. He attended college in England, then studied law in Mexico. After graduation he moved to London and worked for the UN. He directed his first, short films
Maxhumain and
Prisioneros in 1999. His first feature-length film
Japan (Japón, 2002, in Spanish production) drew attention of international critics, but it was censored in Great Britain due to scenes of real cruelty towards animals. His film
Battle in Heaven (Batalla en el cielo, 2005) brought him even more attention, causing much controversy with its explicit sex scenes. His drama
Silent Light (Stellet Licht, 2007) deals with the inner struggle of the members of the Mennonite Church. The film won awards at numerous international film festivals, including Grand Jury Prize in Cannes in 2007 (shared with
Persepolis by Vincent Paronnaud and Marjane Satrapi) and the Motovun Propeller in 2008. He also filmed part of the medium-length omnibus
42 One Dream Rush (2009), the work of some forty directors on the subject of dreams, and part of omnibus by Mexican directors
Revolución (2010). His latest film is a semi-autobiographical drama
Post Tenebras Lux (2012) which brought him best director award in Cannes.