Scott Walker:
Hey Glen!
Glen Dower:
Hi Mr. Walker, how are you, Sir?
Scott Walker:
I’m great. Great to meet you.
Glen Dower:
It’s a pleasure. As writer and director of The Tank, when you were writing, what was the process – did you have this nightmare vision in mind as you were writing, or did it evolve as you were directing?
Scott Walker:
No, definitely had the nightmare and that was the total inspiration. I literally, had the nightmare. My family and I were back from LA in New Zealand for Christmas and that sort of thing, and then Covid happened. So we got stranded here to start with and in that process, a friend said, ‘Look, I’ve got a spare old house if you want to go and I’m renovating, but you can go and stay in it’. At that point, we’d go and live anywhere! This house was built on top of an enormous old grindy water tank. All the rainwater got collected and then ends up in the tank underneath, get collected, and that’s your shower. Anyway, we ran out of water and I climbed down into the tank, and that night I had these nightmares of being in there and then creatures or something oozing out of taps into the bath and turning into creatures and coming and eating my family. Well, we didn’t get eaten, which was great. But suddenly it was like, ok, that’s scary enough to give me a nightmare and I don’t want to go back in that tank. Then clearly, I have to build a scarier one and go into it.