From IMDB:
An archaeologist embarks on the historically important excavation of Sutton Hoo in 1938.
From Netflix:
On the eve of World War II, a British widow hires a self-taught archaeologist to dig up mysterious formations on her land, leading to a staggering find.
From Netflix you can stream this wonderful 1 hour 52 minute complete film.
Ralph Fiennes (who during the filming was 59 years old) plays Basil Brown the excavator and self-taught archaeologist. Carey Mulligan (who was 36) plays the wealthy, widowed landowner Edith Pretty.
Actually the film is a homage to Basil Brown who was a humble man with no formal education whose industrious intelligence led him through self-study to become an intuitively clever amateur archaeologist. In fact a major point of the story is that during his lifetime he was given no credit for having discovered a 6th century Anglo Saxon burial site complete with ship and precious jewelry. Instead the glory was claimed by the “experts” who tried to wrest the project from Basil. But Edith Pretty, who is dying from faulty heart valves damaged by childhood rheumatic fever, comes to the rescue and champions Basil and his right to complete the project which, after all, is on HER land. All the artifacts are now in the British Museum where the explanatory signage give full credit to Basil Brown.
Remember this film is NOT a documentary. But rather a drama involving many threads featuring: Edith’s son and who will care for him when she dies, Edith’s cousin, a young woman excavator whose uncaring husband turns out to be gay, Basil’s wife, and others. World War II also plays a prominent part in the plot.
DO NOT MISS!