Daily Express

Two halves make a hole

- Cert

If, like me, you’re still missing Channel 4’s Time Team, The Dig should be right up your medieval droveway. It tells the true tale of the discovery of the Sutton Hoo hoard – a literally ground-breaking discovery of a buried ship, funny helmet and ancient knick-knacks that completely changed our understand­ing of Anglo-Saxon Britain.

Its handsome photograph­y and starry cast are clear evidence of Covid-thwarted big-screen ambition but, to me, it feels more at home on the living room TV.

Play it in Time Team’s old

Sunday teatime slot to help you blissfully sleep off your roast dinner to the gentle sounds of scraping trowels.

Ralph Fiennes delivers a restrained performanc­e as

Basil Brown, the self-taught working-class “excavation­ist” (to Basil, “archaeolog­ist” is too fancy by far) who unearths the buried ship on the eve of the Second World War.

He was hired by widowed land owner Edith Pretty (Carey Mulligan) to investigat­e the two ancient burial mounds that form the centrepiec­e of her Suffolk estate. The first half is a sedate and quietly engrossing character study as class boundaries blur and Basil and Edith forge a mutual respect.

Sadly, at about the halfway mark, the filmmakers shunt their two talented leads to the sidelines.

When Ken Stott’s snobby British Museum man takes over the dig, the focus shifts to a soapy love triangle involving three younger trowel scrapers played by Lily James, Ben Chaplin and Johnny Flynn.

If you had a half-hour kip in the middle, you’d feel like you’d woken up to a different film entirely.

Halfway in the talented leads are sidelined for a soapy love triangle

 ??  ?? DEEP DIVIDE Ralph Fiennes and Carey Mulligan
DEEP DIVIDE Ralph Fiennes and Carey Mulligan

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