García was born in Barcelona, Spain, in December 1974 and spent most of his early life there. His first job in the motion picture industry was as a special effects technician, working on Brian Yuzna's 2001 horror film '. He later was employed by DDT Efectos Especiales, a special effects company based in Spain. Although he worked primarily on television commercials and television programs, he also continued to do effects for motion pictures. He worked on effects for Pedro Almodóvar's 2002 filmTalk to Her, and Guillermo del Toro's Pan's Labyrinth, The Devil's Backbone, and Hellboy. His first directorial effort was for his own 2004 short film, El ciclo. When the film won the Best Horror Short award at the Screamfest Horror Film Festival in Los Angeles, California, García learned that he had a chance to meet one of his idols, noted special effects artistStan Winston. He paid his own way to Los Angeles to accept the award in person and meet Winston. García was tapped to helm the horror film Smoke for Gold Circle Films in 2005, but the picture went into development hell and was never produced. In October 2007, García was tapped to direct "scream queen" actress Dominique Swain in a horror film tentatively titledSlaughter. However, the film never went forward. Within a month, García was hired by After Dark Films to make his feature film directorial debut helming Return to House on Haunted Hill. Return to House on Haunted Hill was a straight-to-DVD release, after which García directed several short webisodes for Sam Raimi’s Ghost House Pictures. In 2009, he was hired to direct Mirrors 2, a straight-to-DVD sequel to the 2008 horror film Mirrors. In August 2010, García directed the straight-to-DVD horror film ' for The Weinstein Company. This was followed in 2012 by Gallows Hill, a film about an American family in Colombia who free a young girl kept captive by an innkeeper, only to discover they've unleashed a terrible evil. The Peter Facinelli starrer was premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2013. Gallows Hill was renamed The Damned and released in October 2013. It did little box office, and received poor reviews. Jeannette Catsoulis in The New York Times called it "tepid". Garcia was tapped in July 2013 to direct a horror film based on the limited series comic Crawl To Me. The story follows two young adults with a child who move into a remote farmhouse only to find an evil presence in the basement. The film adaptation went into development hell and no production was underway as of May 2016.