Filled with memorable characters, Diggers is the kind of movie that the independent film world used to be known film. The film concerns a group of clam digging buddies who don’t want, or are unable to come to terms with the changes happening around them.
The film centers around Hunt (Paul Rudd), a guy who likes to take random pictures of things and doesn’t really seem to question where his life is headed. He seems happy even though it is clear that he might like to explore other avenues in his life. His best friends are Frankie (Ken Marino), a man who seems like he’s permanently on the edge. He’s got more kids than he knows what to do with, a wife that he doesn’t know how to treat right and nothing he does seems to improve his situation. Then there’s Jack (Ron Eldard) an easy going sort who seems to have no problems currying the favor of the various women that he comes into contact with. Lastly, there’s Cons (Josh Hamilton) and out all the people in the group, he’s the one that seems to be the most on Hunt’s “arty” wavelength. Cons is always thinking about things, examining their inner meanings and his friends seem to put up with him because they’ve known him for so long.
There are female characters in this movie like Frankie’s wife (Sarah Paulson), Hunt’s sister Gina (Maura Tierney) and Zoe (Lauren Ambrose). While these characters certainly affect the males in this film, they more or less go along with the story being told rather than playing a hand in it’s inevitable outcome. Still, these ladies all hold their own and across the board this cast plays as top notch.
Not a lot really happens in this ensemble piece whose central theme seems to be about men approaching middle age realizing that they’re not kids anymore. This isn’t to say that there isn’t anything going on in this movie. As I am 33 I can relate to the themes of this film. I know all too well what it’s like to “drift.” To get too comfortable in your job, your situation, your life… to the point that you have no idea that what you think you love (your world), is actually suffocating you. We see all the characters come to terms with this in their own ways, and as such each responds to it differently. Also, it seems like these characters know that they need this wake up call and that is what is so difficult about it. Life is certainly tough enough without being shaken out of the world you’ve always known but it is necessary, right?
Director Katherine Dieckman adds a serene sense of airiness to this film. In a lot of ways I was reminded of Terrence Malick’s Days of Heaven, as well as Edward Burns more recent The Groomsmen. Dieckman simply presents each story and I never got the sense that she was passing judgment on any of the characters. They all seem to have different lots in life, but they are tied together by the fact that they’ve been doing this job that seems to be going away from them.
I saw Diggers as an elegy for that time in life that we loose after we grow up. Most people think our life cycles are as simple as birth, we grow up, adulthood and then we experience old age. It seems like there are middle phases in there that often get passed over. This film examines the one that happens once all the expectation is gone and people want results. That time when you’re no longer a young man or woman, and while you’re not yet over the hill you’re fast approaching the point where the descent is imminent.