
Paul Schrader plants a seed in action drama Master Gardener
In the new action drama Master Gardener, stoic Narvel Roth (Joel Edgerton, Zero Dark Thirty) quietly tends the grounds at Gracewood Gardens for the estate’s owner, rich widow Mrs Haverhill (Sigourney Weaver, Call Jane) while occasionally also tending her lady garden (cough cough). But a serpent slithers into this Eden when Mrs Haverhill saddles Narvel with a young apprentice – her troubled and rebellious orphaned grandniece, Maya (Quintessa Swindell, Anna in Euphoria S1 episode 7, Laila in In Treatment S4). Maya’s arrival shakes up everything, unbuttoning Narvel’s troubled past and exposing who he was before he arrived at Gracewood.
Stream Master Gardener on Showmax now.
From seed to story with Paul Schrader
Master Gardener’s creator Paul Schrader – writer-director of The Card Counter, director and executive producer of There Are No Saints, and the writer of Robert De Niro’s greatest roles, Taxi Driver and Raging Bull – has made a career out of spotlighting disillusioned men who use violence to “fix” society, when they feel that it isn’t giving them the respect and privilege that they’re entitled to. “The character first evolved with Taxi Driver (1976), which was an outgrowth of the existential hero of European Fiction,” reveals Paul.

The seed of an idea
These lone wolves’ jobs, which they carry out while brooding over the injustice around them, are a jumping off point for Paul as a storyteller. “Whether it’s being a gigolo (American Gigolo, 1980), or a drug dealer (Light Sleeper, 1992), or a gambler (The Card Counter, 2021) or a gardener, it’s about finding a rich metaphor,” says Paul. “Gardening is a particularly rich metaphor, both positively and negatively.”
In Narvel’s story, we find out during a flashback that he was part of a white supremacist murder gang whose job was to “rip out the weeds”. As Narvel lectures about gardens, the character reveals that he now imposes his will on the world in a much more benign way: “Gardening is the manipulation of the natural world. A creation of order, where order is appropriate. The subtle adjustments of disorder, where that would be affected … Gardening is a belief in the future. A belief that things will happen according to plan. That change will come in its due time.”
Paul also uses gardening as a metaphor for the danger of planting dangerous things, as Narval admits to Maya, “Given the right conditions, seeds can last indefinitely. I wear mine on my skin everyday.”

How to grow an idea
“It started out with gardening, much like how The Card Counter started out with gambling. But this was only the start of the creative process,” says Paul. “I started asking why this gardener is such a recluse? From there I thought about the Witness Protection Programme, and again you ask the question, ‘Why is he in the programme?’ This mutated to the idea that he was a gun-for-hire for white supremacists. Asking these questions meant his isolation became completely understandable. As his handler tells him, ‘You’ll never be free from this shadow,’ which is echoed when he says that he wears it on his skin every day in the form of tattoos.”
While Paul acknowledges that Master Gardener is growing in the same ground he’s planted in previous films, he explains that the result keeps changing: “You must create a different social ambience with each film, and then start moving the characters around slightly. It’s all about finding new wine for your skins.”
A new cross-pollination
Narvel’s story grows intertwined with two other figures who contain echoes of Paul’s previous women characters from Taxi Driver. “Here you have a man caught between two women, one old enough to be his mother, the other young enough to be his daughter,” says Paul. “I thought that it would be interesting to see what would happen if Cybill Shepherd’s character, Betsy (a political worker, played by Cybill at the age of 26), had coffee with Jodie Foster’s Iris (a 12-year-old sex trafficking victim).”
What does it say, then, that a former white-supremacist in his 40s like Narvel has sexual relationships with both women – the older white landowner, and her younger, mixed-race grandniece? “We no longer accept the idea that a 55-year-old man and a 25-year-old woman is a perfectly normal arrangement,” admits 77-year-old Paul. “I wanted the age gaps of the characters to add to the unease of the situation. Age, race, and gender made for a good narrative triad, where all the corners of the triangle meet in different ways as they explore the subject matter.”

Time and place
While the film’s plans to shoot in Australia were scuppered by the pandemic, a change of scenery played perfectly into he dynamic between a male white supremacist, a female landowner with inherited wealth, and the younger mixed-race relative she wants trained as a labourer to make her “worthy” to inherit the estate.
Master Gardener’s production moved to Louisiana, where filming had to be timed to coincide with a time of year prior to the big blooming season. The great house in the film, Gracewood, is an amalgam of two former Louisiana plantation houses. Greenwood (a reconstruction of the original mansion that was built in the 1820s by the Barrows family, whose fortune depended on the labour of the 275 enslaved people who worked their sugarcane plantation), and Rosedown (built in 1835, and the source of one of the biggest cotton growing fortunes in the US before the Civil War, thanks to the forced labour of 444 enslaved people). Both estates have since been transformed into botanical gardens.
With Master Gardener, Paul Schrader offers a glimmer of hope for his existential antiheroes. In Narval’s words again, “It's so simple when it begins. You don't ask why? You forget how it started. One day leads to the next, the seeds of love grow, like the seeds of hate.”
Stream Master Gardener on Showmax now.
More like this

Hakeem Kae-Kazim on Showmax crime thriller Masinga - The Calling
SAFTA winner Hakeem Kae-Kazim talks about his title role in the crime thriller Masinga - The Calling, premiering on 5 December 2025 on Showmax.

Piece By Piece (2024)
Grammy-winning artist Pharrell Williams's life gets a bold LEGO twist. It is a vibrant mix of music, a celebration of creativity, and storytelling that will captivate you.

Last Breath (2025)
Woody Harrelson and Simu are in a race against time in this thrilling true story that follows seasoned deep-sea divers as they battle the raging elements to rescue their crew.

Finding Optel (2024)
A whimsical detective story. Claire Abrahams is a teenager who finds her quirky neighbourhood's lost things. When the community's beloved stray dog goes missing, Claire is determined to find her.

Caddo Lake (2024)
When a girl disappears on Caddo Lake, a series of past deaths and disappearances begin to link together, altering a broken family's history.

Finding Optel to hit Showmax after BFI London Film Festival
Mikayla Joy Brown and Jesse Brown talk about Finding Optel's BFI London Film Festival premiere. Coming to Showmax on 24 October 2025.

Black Bag (2025)
Michael Fassbender faces the ultimate test of loyalty in espionage movie Black Bag, about a spy whose wife might be the mole he's tasked to find.

The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim (2024)
The epic anime prequel to The Lord of the Rings franchise. Hera, King Helm's daughter, must lead the fight against an enemy seeking vengeance.
Laugh Africa Comedy Festival S2 on Showmax
Youngins S3, now streaming on Showmax
More enthralling movies to stream

Hakeem Kae-Kazim on Showmax crime thriller Masinga - The Calling
SAFTA winner Hakeem Kae-Kazim talks about his title role in the crime thriller Masinga - The Calling, premiering on 5 December 2025 on Showmax.

Alert: Missing Persons Unit S3
Showrunner John Eisendrath and Jamie Foxx are behind this police procedural. After her son goes missing, Nikki Batista joins the Philadelphia Missing Persons Unit, helping find people's loved ones as she searches for her own.

Lehlohonolo Mayeza on Leruo’s battles in Outlaws Season 2
New love, old foes: Lehlohonolo Mayeza unpacks Leruo's journey in Outlaws S2, on Showmax from 17 November and Mzansi Magic from 22 November.

New seasons of your favourite series, now streaming
The latest seasons of Youngins, Outlaws, Hacks, The Equalizer, Tokyo Vice, and more are all streaming on Showmax.
Latest Stories

What to watch on Showmax in November 2025

Can LFC rediscover the form that saw them crowned champions?

Conor Bradley on Liverpool's difficult run and the path back

Outlaws S2: Meet the new Sihle, Noluthando Ngema

Gallery: Showmax Fan Day with Youngins brings the heat

Must-watch trailer: The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip: Africa

IdeaCandy docuseries Unspoken War looks to start a national conversation

Creating The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim

Bafana Bafana composed for Durban showdown against Zimbabwe

Clementine Mosimane, Mondli Makhoba and Luyanda Zwane join Spinners S2

Arsenal and Liverpool early front-runners ahead of Premier League international break

Married at First Sight's Portia Baloyi on the reunion and her ex
Must-watch trailer: Slay Queens doccie coming to Showmax

The Premier League canvas: a Saturday masterpiece painted in blue and red

Relebogile Mabotja to host the two-hour Married at First Sight reunion special

South Africa in third place at International Emmys, with four MultiChoice nominations

What to watch on Showmax in October 2025

The clash of the new number 9s: Gyökeres vs Woltemade

Married at First Sight: Themba on his "stunning" wife Nelisa

June Squibb wins Best Actress award at age 95 for Thelma

Red vs Blue: Showmax Premier League serves up a blockbuster weekend

Blockbuster Premier League weekend: Red vs Blue

Gerard Butler and O’Shea Jackson Jr chat about Den of Thieves 2: Pantera

Where to see the cast of Levels on Showmax







