![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() It’s an England of an entirely different era whereas these days that pays for a sweat shop of kids working 100hr weeks to make trainers – which is terrible because, let’s be fair, working those sort of hours means the quality suffers – ( You’re fired! – Ed).īrown is a humble but dedicated man, passionate and single minded about his work and both Edith and Brown are correct in their gut feeling about what might be there although unlike our Editor who when he had separated from his wife during renovations on his house wouldn’t let the builders dig up the mysterious mound in his garden (‘ You’re definitely fired!’ – Ed). In the immense grounds of her home there are large mounds and she has a feeling that something of archaeological value is there and she agrees to pay Brown the princely sum of £2 a week. Set in 1939 Suffolk on the verge of World War II it has Basil Brown (Ralph Fiennes ) a small time archaeologist though he describes himself as the far less grandiose, ‘excavator’ calling at the huge country home of widow Edith Pretty ( Carey Mulligan) and her young son Archie (Robert Pretty). As it is The Dig is a far more pleasurable viewing experience. Frankly if we wanted to watch a film about a group of the fashion challenged underclass scrabbling about in the mud looking for lost jewellery we would have watched CCTV footage of Gemma Collins wading around in a mud bath looking for her hoop earrings. ![]()
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