The Guardian (USA)

Undergroun­d review – mine explosion disaster film digs deeper than most

- Cath Clarke

Here is an arthouse disaster movie from Quebec: a naturalist­ic, character-driven drama about what it might truly look like if a mineral mine exploded, trapping five workers undergroun­d. It’s the second feature from French-Canadian director Sophie Dupuis, who herself grew up in a mining family.

She opens her film in the heat of the rescue: red lights flashing, a response team descending into darkness. One of the rescuers, Max (Joakim Robillard), would be the hero of the Hollywood version, running around hot-headedly, disobeying orders: “Fuck you! I’m going to get the others!” Actually, much of the film is about how damaging it is for Max living with this tough-guy masculinit­y.

Dupuis takes us back two months, shows him failing to be there for his girlfriend. He’s also struggling to have a meaningful relationsh­ip with his best friend, who has been left with lifechangi­ng injuries after an accident, and is played so sensitivel­y by Théodore Pellerin that I half-wished the film had been told from his perspectiv­e.

Depuis is brilliant on the dynamics in men’s relationsh­ips. Unlike Max, most of her miners – macho dudes built like wardrobes who trade piss-taking banter all day – are sensitive to each other’s mental health. They need to be: behind the controls of massive machinery, one lapse in concentrat­ion can be fatal for everyone. At the start of the shift the foreman taps his heart and head and asks each miner: “Are you OK here and here?”

When they come, however, I’m not sure the explosion or rescue are depicted with quite enough jeopardy or claustroph­obia. Still, I loved the scene in the office immediatel­y after the blast, as the foreman and a colleague mechanical­ly follow protocol: making telephone calls, working through their checklist, on the edge of panic, swallowing their terror. This moment of calm is the antithesis to the action-stations style of a Hollywood movie – and is the more terrifying for it.

• Undergroun­d is released on 20 August in cinemas.

 ??  ?? On the edge of panic … Undergroun­d.
On the edge of panic … Undergroun­d.

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