THE GOLD DIGGERS
THE GOLD DIGGERS
A controversial, delightfully feminist and boldly innovative feature debut from Sally Potter. The lives of Celeste (Colette Laffont), a bank clerk, and Ruby (Julie Christie), a film star, intersect in an unexpected way. Their encounter sparks a journey across the outer edges of cinema history.
Sally Potter’s controversial, delightfully feminist and groundbreaking feature debut. In the early 1980s, thanks to a grant from the British Film Institute, Potter shook up the status quo, turning the traditional musical – and the conventional mode of storytelling – on its head. THE GOLD DIGGERS, made by an all-female crew, takes its title from one of Warner Bros.’ most iconic 1930s works, GOLD DIGGRERS OF 1933 by Mervyn LeRoy and Busby Berkeley (1933), set against the Great Depression. Potter transforms the Hollywood objectification of dancing heroines into a visually and sonically sophisticated deconstruction of the genre.
The lives of Celeste (Colette Laffont), a bank clerk, and Ruby (Julie Christie), a film star, intersect unexpectedly. Their encounters and shared adventures serve as a launchpad to question the “pleasure of the male gaze” in cinema, and explore links between capitalism (gold!) and feminism, and embark on a radical journey through the fringes of film history.
Initially received with mixed, and sometimes hostile, reactions, Potter’s film was accused in the 1980s of being hermetic and overly political, remaining largely inaccessible for decades. Today, the digitally restored THE GOLD DIGGERS reclaims its rightful place as a key 1980s experiment and a cornerstone of new British cinema directed by women.
Text: Sebastian Smoliński
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