LOS ANGELES — One of the few moments of levity in ''Longlegs'' — the Neon horror film in theaters now about a Satanist serial killer — happens when Maika Monroe's character, Lee Harker, meets her co-worker's young daughter.
It's obvious the analytical FBI agent doesn't spend a lot of time around kids. Her stoic, awkward personality is comically heightened by this interaction with the child, who asks Harker to do things she obviously has no interest in, like seeing the girl's bedroom or coming to her birthday party.
Critics have praised the 31-year-old's ''Longlegs'' performance — which says something when you share the screen with Nicolas Cage. But her calculated, offbeat character is even more impressive given Monroe's affable, almost whimsical personality.
''There's a kind of childlike quality to her that is extremely compelling and graceful and charming,'' said Cage of his co-star.
Her endearing approachability is perhaps at least somewhat attributable to the fact that she has always kept Hollywood at arm's length. ''I don't necessarily like being fully consumed in this world,'' Monroe said in a recent interview.
Neither of her parents work in the entertainment industry and only reluctantly agreed to start driving her to Los Angeles from Santa Barbara for auditions as a kid while she balanced school and her kiteboarding hobby. And instead of obsessing about getting her big break after years of trying, Monroe took some time away to be a professional kiteboarder in the Dominican Republic when she was 17.
''I was pretty much like, ‘Acting just isn't for me.' I go to classes, I work on my lines, I work so hard for these auditions, and I feel like I'm doing all the things and it just isn't clicking,'' Monroe recalled. ''It was so frustrating. And it was getting to a place where it just wasn't feeling good anymore.''
But she wasn't ready to give up entirely. Although she got rid of her agent, Monroe kept her manager, who would occasionally encourage her to send in audition tapes.