Luchadores Productions Debuts to Redefine Latino Brand Storytelling
Luchadores Productions Launch Insights:
Luchadores Productions opens as a fully minority-owned studio, established by filmmakers Robert Teitel and Alfredo De Villa.
Celebrity directors John Leguizamo, Jay Hernandez, and Phil Bertelsen join with first-time commercial representation.
Clients include Microsoft, Amazon, Bud Light, and Netflix, showcasing proven appeal with major brands.
Latino stories don’t just resonate; they drive results.
In 2023, U.S. Latino purchasing power reached over $4.1 trillion, ranking as the fifth-largest economy in the world.
Luchadores Productions is stepping in to ensure brands tell these stories the right way.
Backed by industry veterans, the new Los Angeles studio is positioning itself as a creative force for culture-driven brand content.
The Team Behind Luchadores Productions | Source: Luchadores Productions via Rightword Media, Inc.
Director Alfredo De Villa and producer Robert Teitel launched the studio to address the lack of Latino representation in media by producing content rooted in real cultural experiences for brand clients.
Yet despite being 19.5% of the population, Latinos have earned just 4.4% of lead/co-leads in top films since 2007, just under 1% for Afro‑Latinos.
The company brings together a high-profile directing team making their commercial debut.
Joining De Villa are filmmaker and stage performer John Leguizamo, actor-turned-director Jay Hernandez, and documentary director Phil Bertelsen.
Each has developed a body of work in film, television, and live performance that speaks to diverse audiences and grounded storytelling.
De Villa and Teitel first collaborated in 2008 on "Nothing Like the Holidays," a feature film rooted in Teitel’s Puerto Rican family experiences set in Chicago.
That collaboration laid the foundation for Luchadores’ creative approach.
Teitel, whose producing credits include Soul Food, Barbershop, and The Hate U Give, contributes decades of experience in delivering stories that resonate across communities.
In a DesignRush exclusive, he emphasized the studio’s broader vision, pointing to the importance of inclusion in storytelling.
"Our mission is to elevate voices that too often go unheard."
"By drawing on the diverse experiences within our team, we’re reshaping the way meaningful stories are told in today’s media landscape."
De Villa, who has taught commercial directing and led campaigns for brands like Oracle and Amazon, brings hands-on insight into both the narrative and branding.
The team also includes Head of Postproduction Tim Donahue, who will oversee delivery for multi-platform content.
Trusted by Global Powerhouses
Luchadores has already worked with a wide range of well-known clients including Microsoft, Bud Light, Netflix, and Meta.
The company builds its strategy around three central values:
Partnerships that reflect inclusion
Storytelling with a global lens
Production that adapts to digital-first demands
Its cross-platform production focus meets modern brand demands, ensuring assets are optimized for both broadcast and digital use.
Our Take: Why Does a Latino-Owned Studio Matter in Today’s Ad Industry?
As a person of color, I see Luchadores Productions not just filling a market gap but correcting a narrative imbalance.
Brands often talk about diversity, but storytelling remains filtered through narrow lenses.
This studio flips that.
With top-tier talent and clients like Netflix and Amazon already on board, Luchadores is proof that culturally rooted storytelling isn't niche. It’s necessary.
It's not just about representation on camera; it's about whose voice is shaping the message from concept to final cut.
This launch sends a clear message to agencies and CMOs: authentic, culturally resonant content isn’t a trend, it’s the standard forward-thinking brands must embrace.
As Luchadores champions Latino voices in media, Del Real Foods spotlights Hispanic grandmas to show that authentic cultural storytelling also belongs at the dinner table.