One review on 06 Mar 2021

UK 2021

Running time: 112 mins

The Dig

Director : Simon Stone 

Setting: Suffolk, England
Summary: Story of the Sutton Hoo excavation in 1938/9


Cast:

  • Ralph Fiennes  Basil Brown
  • Carey Mulligan  Edith Pretty


Aspect Ratio: 2.0 Widescreen

Colour: Colour

Sound: Dolby digital

Tech Notes: Dolby digital


Film Category

First Seen: Sat 6th Mar 2021
Catalogued: 9th Mar 2021

Synopsis

Pretty much the true story as far as we know, slightly spiced up for dramatic reasons. Wealthy widow Edith Pretty employs maverick  archaeological excavator Basil Brown to explore burial mounds on her land. 

What he discovers - an anglo-saxon ship burial - brings the archaeology establishment running and squabbles ensue. Edith sails through it in it all comes good.

Reviews

by rogerco on Sat 6th Mar 2021 DVD proj @ home

The Dig I Didn't Dig

Summary

Classic Englishness. So little to like.

Full review

Naturally there are minor quibbles about some of the adjustment of the true story for dramatic affect. Edith was much to young (she was actually well into her 40s), the spurious use of the coming war as a dramatic tension builder is unlikely to have been real - Basil started excavating in 1938 and the discovery was complete well before war was declared in '39. The character of the RAF pilot cousin was, I think, a complete invention - the photographer on site in 1939 was actually a woman and Peggy remained married to her husband until the 1960s. I suspect the crash of the aeroplane into the river is a complete dramatic invention. I'd never heard that Uncle Robert had any direct involvement with Basil and his wife, but it might have happened.

Setting those quibbles aside - after all it doesn't claim to be documentary - it is a classic bit of rose tinted English nostalgia where everyone is in their place and knows it. (see The Go Between etc etc). 

The first half cover the development of a non-relationship between Edith and Basil which is never going anywhere (this is not the Go Between, despite the use of a child to link the protagonists across the class divide), so it then has to switch to the triangle between Peggy, her closet gay husband, and the dashing dishy cousin. But it is all a bit obvious.

Good points - interesting use of sound - music and dialogue crossing between scenes to give an impression of a character's interior life. Well photographed, the flat Suffolk landscape comes across and the interiors, like the pub scenes, work well. Ralph Fiennes plays Basil Brown very well.

But overall it is just another feel-good everything is alright with the English world bit of nostalgic propoganda.