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DIGGERS, THE (director/writer:
Sally Potter; screenwriters: Lindsay Cooper/Rose
English; cinematographer: Babette Mangolte; editor:
Sally Potter; music: Lindsay Cooper;
cast: Julie
Christie (Ruby), Colette Laffont (Celeste), George Antoni (Stage Manager), Kassandra Colson (Welder), Hilary
Westlake (Ruby's Mother), David Gale (Expert), Tom
Osborn (Expert's assistant), Jacky Lansley (Tap Dancer);
Runtime: 89; MPAA Rating: NR; producers:
Nita Amy/Donna Grey; BFI PAL DVD form; 1983-UK) "An amazing watch." Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz The
self-taught trained dancer Sally Potter'
("Orlando"/"Yes"/"The Tango Lesson") debut as a feature film
director is a welcome sight for sore eyes for those
yearning for more insightful indie woman's pictures.
The immensely talented, idea-orientated and artistic
Potter has followed in the footsteps of Yvonne Rainer
to create a groundbreaking experimental feminist film,
one that was made with an all-woman crew. It's
co-written in a witty and far-reaching metaphorical
manner by Potter, Lindsay Cooper and Rose
English. The
controversial (received largely negative reviews
upon its release for
not being accessible and for its shabby treatment of
men), one-of-a-kind, oddity film is a blend of sci-fi
fantasy, western, silent melodrama and Klondike
adventure tale, that plays out as an anti-capitalist
satirical musical extravaganza. It's an amazing watch
because it's so visually stunning in its bizarre b/w
images of such things as ballroom dancers, the Yukon
tundra and its horseback escapes. The plotless film
makes waves about being an alchemical search for
knowledge that's original, unpredictable and
innovative. Yet it's not without detractions, as the
flawed film's labored attempts to marry the
avant-garde with commercial filmmaking leaves awkward
and heavy-handed unfulfilled moments. In addition
there are too many surreal scenes that keep its theme
of the link between gold, money and women cloudy and
prevents the viewer from keeping a focus on any one
thing. The recipe calling for widely different genres
to blend together becomes messy, as the ingredients
just don't blend together that well and the film loses
some of its commercial entertainment value and the
experimental part comes across at times as
pretentious. Nevertheless
this film strikes gold by not finding it, as it digs
in uncharted territory to find the inner search for
truth in relation to the power of cinema--making it
like a Holy Grail quest for metaphysical gold nuggets,
one that finds limited success because of the
questions it raises. The film's focus is on two
female characters of an opposite nature who are
searching for things that have eluded them. The
beautiful enigmatic upper crust white Ruby (Julie
Christie), a representation of femininity in the
cinema and a name referring to the philosopher's
stone, treks to the Yukon to search out her roots and thereby
seeks to find the truth about her identity, to seek
out her lost mother and to be where her father was a gold prospector.
While Celeste
(Colette Laffont), a black computer clerk in a bank,
is obsessed with the relationship between money and
power. When Celeste asks questions about banking
practices to her chauvinist bosses (all the male parts
were caricatures of the system's male power
structure), she's treated like dirt. Ruby is saved from being
worshiped as a sex symbol by the alienated female
laborer Celeste and subjected to an interrogation that
has the dreamlike Ruby admit remembering little
because conditions kept her in the dark. But with the
analytical Celeste's help, they both tie together the
relationship of the Hollywood star system and the
financial system as part of the dialectical process.
This leaves the two truth seeking women from opposite
classes, bonded. They now have a feminist riddle to
unravel that will reveal if answered the secrets of
gold and the secrets of personal transformation. If that story line sounds
too didactic, that's because it is. But when breezy
and shooting from the hip, it can be inspiring in
telling us that
feminism can transform capitalism, that we should all
live in the present and that dancing is just the
end-all in fun. It's a defiant film that begs for
multiple viewings, though I can see haters not caring
to further examine the role of women in art and in a
man's business world. REVIEWED ON 2/20/2012 GRADE: B+ Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |