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Diggers
Reviewed by Rich Drees
The mid-1970s are not a good time for the independent fishermen of
Long Island who make their living digging clams. A large commercial
firm has just closed a deal granting them exclusive rights to
certain clam-rich waters, making it even harder in the economically
depressed times for the independent diggers to scratch out a living.
Hunt (Paul
Rudd) is one such digger. In his early 30s, he has followed his
father and grandfather into the family business, but his heart
doesn’t seem to be into it. Hunt is not so much an aimless drifter
but someone whose search for a direction in life is weighted down by
family obligations. But following the death of his father, Hunt
seems reluctant to make any changes. Hunt’s best friend Lozo (Ken
Marino, who also authored the screenplay) is a mirror image of Hunt.
He has a family and is quiet happy with his life as an independent
digger. However, with mounting debt and the drop in income following
the most profitable clam fields being restricted, it seems
inevitable that he, too, will have to make a change he is unwilling
to make. As the summer slowly heads towards fall, Hunt, Lozo and
their friends contemplate how their world is changing and what those
changes may mean for them.
While it sounds
like material for a rather dreary drama, Diggers is more of a
light-hearted slice of small town life with Rudd and Marino heading
up a capable ensemble cast. Maura Tierney stands out as Hunt’s
sister, who takes up with Hunt’s friend and local lothario Jack (Ron
Eldrad), behind her brother’s back. Sarah Paulson also does
remarkable work as Lozo’s long-suffering wife. Marino’s character
walks the boarder of being cartoonish, yet Marino never steps over
that line. Marino and Paulson share one especially fine moment where
the two face an important decision regarding the future of their
family. The screenplay plenty of attention to most of the
characters, balancing their stories fairly well. The only character
whom seems underserved is Hunt’s love interest Zoey, played by
Lauren Ambrose.
For all the
silliness of Marino’s script for the comedy The Ten (also
screening at the Philadelphia Film Festival), he displays a hitherto
unseen emotional depth here. Sure, some of the elements of the story
have been seen before, but they’re written and acted so true that
they generate empathy for the characters, not contempt for their
familiarity. A long Island native who grew up in the 70s, it is hard
not to think that there may be more than a touch of autobiography to
be found here.
But whether
autobiographical or not, by setting it in the summer of 1976,
Marino’s screenplay is able to make use of the then current
presidential election campaigns - as imparted by television news
reports seen in the background throughout the movie - to draw some
interesting parallels. As the country was coming out of the turmoil
of the end of the Vietnam War and Watergate, it was at a political
crossroads of sort with President Gerald Ford representing, fairly
or unfairly, the turmoil of the last several years and Democratic
nominee Jimmy Carter representing a new direction and a break from
the past. |