Catching Up With Michael Walker, Director of The Maid’s Room
It’s rare to come across a ghost story-turned-psychological thriller, that highlights the implications of class for both the one percent, and the working poor in America. The Maid’s Room does just this, as a dark, slow-burning, film that haunts the viewer, even as it raises questions about our [mis]understandings of “the other.” Director Michael Walker embraces the uncanny in his plot (it could even be argued that there are some Turn of the Screw parallels to the film), which revolves around a vulnerable maid (Paula Garcés) who witness a crime in the Hamptons home where she works. Paste caught up with Walker to talk comedy versus thriller, the genesis of The Maid’s Room, and never coming clean.
Paste Magazine: When we first set up this interview, I hadn’t realized that you also directed Price Check. I love that movie!
Michael Walker: Oh, great!
Paste: And now you’re back to making psychological thrillers. Could you talk a little about moving from one genre to the next? Do you have a preference between comedies, and suspenseful, darker films?
Walker: I like doing both. I actually just directed a short comedy. Comedies are probably more fun to do, in a way. But with both of them you concentrate on the acting. With comedy, you can’t have quite as much fun with the camera that you can have when you get into a psychological drama. That’s the only real difference.
Making Price Check was just so fun, and Parker Posey was so funny and great.
Paste: She was hilarious.
Walker: Spending time with all of those actors was wonderful, but with Maid’s Room there were only a few of us, and it was much tougher to shoot.
Paste: Our editor was a big fan of The Shield, so I know he’d definitely want me to ask you about working with Paula Garcés. How did she end up playing Drina?
Walker: She auditioned, and she was just incredible. She was just right on. It happens every once in a while, where you just get a great audition from someone. She based Drina on her grandmother a little bit, and she had an accent that she had prepared that was partly based on a friend of hers, who had grown up in New York, but still had a little bit of a Colombian accent.
She was just right there, emotionally. And working with her was also great. She was very professional, and I couldn’t have gotten through the film without her. We focus so much on her, and she’s so vulnerable throughout so much of it.
Paste: I was on your blog earlier, and saw that you started the draft for The Maid’s Room ten years ago.
Walker: Yes, I think I got the copyright in 2003.