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Arts & Entertainment

Shocking new thriller 'The Housemaid' puts complex women at the center — just how Paul Feig likes it

A man with a black suit, a bowtie, and a cowboy hat points at the viewer. He is standing against a red backdrop with white text that reads "The Housemaid."
Paul Feig attends the Los Angeles premiere of Lionsgate's "The Housemaid" at TCL Chinese Theatre on Monday in Hollywood.
(
Monica Schipper
/
Getty Images
)

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Paul Feig is known to center women in films like Bridesmaids, The Heat, A Simple Favor and the 2016 Ghostbusters reboot.

Following that trend, his newest psychological thriller, The Housemaid, stars Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried as co-leads. Sweeney’s character is hired as a live-in housemaid for a wealthy couple in a mansion. She soon finds out that the couple has dark secrets. The movie is an adaptation of Freida McFadden’s novel of the same name.

LAist host Julia Paskin talked with Feig about his latest film and keeping women at the forefront in his movies.

Balancing comedy and thriller in ‘The Housemaid’

The Housemaid is a mystery laden with humor. He says to strike that tonal balance, you have to take the genre seriously.

Paul Feig:  There's some heavy things in this movie. It's pretty dark. But for me, the fun comes from the retribution. You build an audience up. It's a very interesting movie because it has a big twist right in the middle.

And so we kind of set you up in the first hour of the movie and then we pay you off in the second hour. And it's really a brilliantly written book. Freida McFadden did an amazing job just with the structure of it 'cause you really get seduced into this story, and then the rug gets pulled out from under you.

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On centering women in his films

Julia Paskin: It used to be so unusual to tell stories that are centered on women characters.  You work with these really funny women.  How do you have these relationships when it seemed like some of your counterparts that are also men in comedy were not forging those same relationships?

Paul Feig:  I guess it's what your sense of humor is and what you're comfortable around. And I was an only child. I was really close to my mom and my nextdoor neighbors were this family of eight kids and six were girls, and they were all kinda my best friends ...  and it was that coupled with seeing how, especially in comedy, women were really treated as props in comedy to be foils to the guys who were funny. And I just didn't like that.

Feig’s tips on dealing with online trolls

In 2016, Paul Feig directed a reboot of the Ghostbusters series starring an all-female-led cast, including Melissa McCarthy and Leslie Jones. After Feig announced the movie and cast on his Twitter page, users criticized the all-female casting choice, calling it a “gimmick.” At one point, the trailer for the film was the most down-voted movie trailer on YouTube.

Feig reflected on his announcement of the movie on Twitter and subsequent backlash to the direction of the movie.

Paul Feig:  The first 24 hours was just pure excitement from all my fans. I went to bed that night, like, ‘This is the greatest thing,’ and got up in the morning …  and then just my feed turned into just absolute hatred and death threats.

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Julia Paskin: What do you do in a situation like that? I'm just starting to kind of get a small taste as a broadcaster.

Paul Feig:  You ignore and you mute. You [weren’t] able to mute back then. You had to block somebody. And if you blocked them, it was a badge of honor and they would put the block symbol up and say, ‘Look, he's avoiding us or whatever’ ...

So just mute and don’t respond no matter how terrible it is.

This interview has been edited for clarity and length. Watch the full interview below.

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