Otago Daily Times

INSIDE TODAY

Bringing The Dig to life meant burying Ralph Fiennes alive during the excavation, writes Bryan Alexander.

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BRACE yourself for some cold movie truths: Actual archaeolog­y is not the swashbuckl­ing adventure seen in Indiana Jones movies.

The reality of the achingly deliberate work required to unearth even the grandest archaeolog­ical treasure presented a major hurdle for The Dig (streaming now on Netflix), which centres around the historic 1939 excavation of a treasurepa­cked 6thcentury Viking burial ship and cemetery in an English field at Sutton Hoo, in Suffolk.

‘‘Archaeolog­ical movies tend to be quite sensationa­l. Indiana Jones is always stealing things from tombs,’’ said archaeolog­ist Roy Stephenson, who consulted on The Dig.

``It's quite slow and painstakin­g, so potentiall­y an archaeolog­ical excavation could be like watching paint dry. But they made a special story here.’’

The Dig filmmakers tapped into the human drama of the famed find involving amateur archaeolog­ist Basil Brown (Ralph Fiennes) and the site's wealthy widowed landowner Edith Pretty (Carey Mulligan), and added a side love story involving a young archaeolog­ist (Lily James).

But the big draw is the striking screen creation, the impressive­ly rebuilt Sutton Hoo excavation site where the 30mlong Viking ship was uncovered.

‘‘We had to do it for real,’’ director Simon Stone said.

‘‘The reason we invest in unusual stories about these weird worlds is because you can feel the fabric of truth in everything you are watching. You need to present what it's like to be there, the shock of sudden discoverie­s.

‘‘If we had created that artificial­ly, the audience would've smelled that a mile away.’’

Creating the odd, grasscover­ed burial mounds, then recreating the uncovering of the massive Viking ship imprinted in the soil (the ship's wood had decayed over the centuries), was a tremendous undertakin­g.

Six massive mounds were formed on a farm in Surrey, just outside of London, to simulate the original field. Each was covered in seeds and fertilised weeks before production started to allow wild grass and weeds to flourish as they had in the 1930s.

Two of the mounds were used for early stages of the dig. A third was dug up to replicate the outline of the ship, with the crisp imprint held together by clear fibreglass.

‘‘It was awesome. It made the hairs stand on my neck,’’ Stephenson said of surveying the site.

The digging of the ship was shot in reverse order to allow increasing amounts of soil to be added for earlier scenes of discovery.

‘‘It was a challenge, filming and imagining what it would feel like to finish this job and then moving backward to earlier joys of the discovery,’’ Stone said.

During the movie's autumn shoot, the location was swamped in powerful rainstorms that ‘‘made it look like a disaster zone’’, he said.

The set, and earth, had to be restored as if it was sitting in the hot, sunny summer of 1939 rather than 2019 drenching rain.

When a storm was called for in the story, the rain stopped. ‘‘It was raining when it shouldn't rain, and then not raining when we wanted it to rain.’’

Fiennes was adamant that the smallest dig movement be archaeolog­ically correct after cast training.

Stephenson was given ‘‘carte blanche’’ to interrupt any incorrect digging. ‘‘It's a real eyeopener that film teams put so much effort into authentici­ty,’’ he said.

The British actor also took the ultimate realistic measure, filming a scene where his character is entirely engulfed in soil from a collapsing wall, and has to be dug out by a team led by Mulligan's Pretty.

A stunt double was hired, but Fiennes insisted on doing the scene himself, pointing to a passage where Brown says, ‘‘I come from this soil, I know this soil. And I have lived my life knowing the earth around here.’’

‘‘I cannot in good conscience say those words, and know I did the comfortabl­e thing before stepping in once all the hard work was done,’’ Fiennes told Stone.

The scene required Fiennes to have his body buried for long stretches, and the moment of having his entire head covered in soil lasted about 30 seconds before he was uncovered dramatical­ly before the camera.

‘‘It's remarkable to watch the realism of a moment like that,’’ said Stone, who estimated there were five takes of his leading man being covered in soil.

‘‘But we did find ways which did not always involve having to bury Ralph Fiennes alive.’’

Fiennes was the ultimate method perfection­ist, tackling not only the distinct regional Suffolk accent but also having his local vocal coach teach him dialect and words that would conform to the 1930s. The Shakespear­ean actor never departed from his ineloquent character during the shoot.

‘‘It's such a difficult accent. He had nothing he could rely on in his body memory for how that person should be. So he had to just stay there,’’ Stone said.

‘‘He was like ‘This is me, and this is me for the whole shoot’. He took the Daniel DayLewis mantle.’’

Stone said Fiennes would sign all his emails, even text messages, as Basil.

‘‘Even a couple of months ago, he still ended an email ‘X Basil’,’’ Stone said.

‘‘But I got one from him yesterday signed ‘Love, Ralph’. So I think he has freed himself. Now that the world can carry the story, he can let it go.’’ — TNA

The Dig is available to stream on Netflix.

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