Digging to China
Timothy Hutton, who won an Oscar for Ordinary People, turns his hand to
"special" people for his directorial debut. The title endeavor is just one of
several ways in which young Harriet (Evan Rachel Wood) tries to escape from her
alcoholic mother (Cathy Moriarty), sluttish sister (a tough and nicely textured
return to the screen for Mary Stuart Masterson), and the tacky motel that is
her small-town, early-'60s home. Relief comes in the form of Ricky (Kevin
Bacon, a sinister cross between Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man and Howdy
Doody), a mentally challenged man who checks into the motel with his ailing
mother en route to an institution. Heavy on the melodrama (a fatal car accident
and out-of-wedlock maternity are thrown in for good measure) and cuteness
(Harriet and Ricky get "married"), Digging benefits from Hutton's
whimsy, eye for period detail, and restraint -- not to mention Wood's spirited
moppet. Although it doesn't dig deeply enough into its issues of quiet
desperation and nascent sexuality, this remains a well-crafted miniature.
Screens at the Copley Place Thursday, September 10 at 5:30, 7:20, and 9:20 p.m. and
Friday, September 11 at 12:30, 3:30, and 5:30 p.m.
Film Festival Feature Films
|
With Friends like These |
Digging to China |
Monument Ave. |
Rounders |
Lolita |
God Said, 'Ha!' |
My Son the Fanatic |
The Mighty |
Shattered Image |
Gods and Monsters |
Xui Xui: The Sent-Down Girl |
Without Limits |
Clubland |
The Inheritors |
The Celebration |
Urban Ghost Story |
The Boys |
Living Out Loud |
Stuart Bliss |
The General |
The Kindness of Strangers |
Dancing at Lughnasa |
Central Station |
The Human Race |
Double You Street |
Oberwasser -- By U-boat to America |
The Witman Boys |
The Cruise |
Confession of a Sexist Pig |
Melting Pot |
More Boston Film Festival information, film descriptions, and show times
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