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Diggstown

 
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Diggstown

  • Director: Michael Ritchie
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Crime
  • Movie Type: Crime Comedy, Sports Comedy
  • Themes: Cons and Scams, Boxers
  • Main Cast: James Woods, Louis Gossett, Jr., Bruce Dern, Oliver Platt, Heather Graham
  • Release Year: 1992
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 97 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

In this comedy, a charming con man teams up with a boxer fallen on hard times in hopes of making some quick money. After doing time for selling art that turned out to be forged, Gabriel Caine (James Woods) and his partner Fitz (Oliver Platt) set their sights on a village called Diggstown; Fitz arrives first and takes several well-heeled locals in a high-stakes poker game, and then Gabriel follows to make a sporting proposition to John Gillon (Bruce Dern), the city's wealthiest citizen. Gabriel tells Gillon he has a boxer that can beat any ten opponents Gillon can line up, in the same day. Gillon takes the challenge and places a big enough wager to make matters even more interesting, but now Gabriel has to convince Honey Ray Palmer (Louis Gossett Jr.), a middle-aged former boxer who has been taken for a ride by Gabriel in the past, to go along with this scheme. In the meantime, Gabriel works out a deal with gangster Victor Corsini (Orestes Matacena) to back his bets while romancing Emily (Heather Graham), the sister of a large and ill-tempered fighter Gabriel met while behind bars. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

Michael Ritchie's Diggstown is a shaggy dog of a movie. Utterly implausible and full of silliness, it still takes the viewer for a very enjoyable ride. James Woods has center stage here as a con man and he is more than up to the task. The audience can believe he would be capable of dreaming up the outrageous stunt that is the centerpiece of the film. Oliver Platt shines, as always, with his limited screentime, and the always menacing Bruce Dern is, well, menacing. Louis Gossett Jr. is the perfect age and is just physically impressive enough to make the audience buy that he might succeed in an attempt to fight ten guys in succession. The film lacks any of the thematic resonance of Ritchie's superb '70s film, but Diggstown is professionally told and certainly holds interest while its on the screen -- even if it will evaporate from the memory not long after the closing credits finish rolling. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide

Cast

Randall "Tex" Cobb - Wolf Forrester; Thomas Wilson Brown - Robby Gillon; Duane Davis - Hambone Busby; Willie Green - Hammerhead Hagan; Orestes Matacena - Victor Corsini; Jose Alcala - Boxing Kid; Marshall Bell - Warden Bates; Jeff Benson - Tank Miller; Nelly Bly - Emily's Friend; David Candreva - Coach; James Caviezel - Billy Hargrove; Frank Collison - Prison Guard; John Walter Davis - Chet Willis; Michael de Lorenzo - Paulo; David Fresco - Fish; Alex Garcia - Minoso Torres; Cindi Gossett - Mary Palmer; Larry Ham - Betting Guard; Roger Hewlett - Sam Lester; Victor Koliacos - Boxing Kid; Michael McGrady - Frank Mangrum; Rocky Pepeli - Buck Holland; Jeremy Roberts - Sonny; Kim Robillard - Sheriff Stennis; John Short - Corney "Buster" Robbins; Troy A. Smith - Betting Guard; Laura Tate - Marcy; Raymond Turner - Slim Busby; Benny Urquidez - Referee; Wilhelm von Homburg - Charles Macum Diggs; George D. Wallace - Bob Ferris; Kenneth White - Ben Culver; Richard Pagano

Credit

Michael Okowita - Art Director, Steven McKay - Associate Producer, Wayne A. Finkelman - Costume Designer, Michael Ritchie - Director, Don Zimmerman - Editor, James Newton Howard - Composer (Music Score), Kim Ornitz - Musical Direction/Supervision, Stephen Hendrickson - Production Designer, Gerry Fisher - Cinematographer, Robert Schaffel - Producer, Art Schaeffer - Producer, Youssef Vahabzadeh - Producer, Barbara Drake - Set Designer, Jim Nickerson - Stunts, Bobby Bass - Stunts, Steven McKay - Screenwriter, Leonard Wise - Book Author

Similar Movies

Skin Game; The Sting; The Shakedown; The Great White Hype; Play It to the Bone; Against the Ropes; Undisputed; The Hammer
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Wikipedia: Diggstown
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Diggstown

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Michael Ritchie
Produced by Robert Schaffel
Youssef Vahabzadeh
Written by Steven McKay
Starring James Woods
Louis Gossett, Jr.
Bruce Dern
Oliver Platt
Music by James Newton Howard
Cinematography Gerry Fisher
Editing by Don Zimmerman
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s) August 14, 1992
Running time 98 min
Country USA
Language English

Diggstown (also known as Midnight Sting) is a movie directed by Michael Ritchie, and starring James Woods, Louis Gossett, Jr. and Bruce Dern. It also features Heather Graham, Oliver Platt and Randall "Tex" Cobb.

Synopsis

Gabriel Caine (James Woods), a con man, is released from prison in Winfield, Georgia and immediately gets to work on his next scam. Caine and his partner, Fitz (Oliver Platt), travel to a small town not far from the prison: Diggstown, a city obsessed with boxing.

A mean-spirited man named John Gillon (Bruce Dern) owns almost all of Diggstown. He is feared by many but also respected because he was the former manager of Diggstown’s pride and joy, the once-famous boxer Charles Macom Diggs, the man for whom the town is named.

Upon hearing a remark that Diggs once knocked out five fighters in one day, Fitz “drunkenly” says he knows of a fighter who could knock out any 10 in one day: Honey Roy Palmer. Gillon tries to take advantage of the situation and bets Fitz $100,000 that no one man can best ten Diggstown boxers in one day. Caine quickly volunteers to finance Fitz's bet and the con is on.

Caine seeks out an old buddy, Palmer (Louis Gossett Jr.), who is now a 48-year-old YMCA supervisor. After some initial reluctance, Palmer agrees to participate and starts to train for the fight. Caine and Gillon agree to various conditions of the bet, with “one day” being 24 full hours and “Diggstown fighters” being able to come from any surrounding area of Olivair County. A loan shark backs Caine's bet, with the understanding that his health and welfare will be riding on the outcome.

Caine discovers that Gillon’s treachery (and his bank account) goes deeper than Diggstown people know. As his manager, Gillon drugged Diggs during a fight so that Gillon could collect on the opponent’s long odds. Diggs suffered irreversible brain damage as a result.

With help from his prison buddy Wolf's sister (Heather Graham), it is learned that Gillon has more than $1.5 million in assets. Caine tricks him into risking all of it. Now it is up to Honey Roy Palmer to defeat all 10 of Diggstown's men.

They begin with:

-- Buck Hollan, who puts up a good fight, but Palmer bests him.

-- Slim Busby, who like his brother, Hambone, has been bribed by Caine to take a dive.

-- Billy Hargrove (a young James Caviezel), who is easily beat.

-- Sam Lester, who is secretly given a laxative before the fight and eventually runs from the ring.

-- Hambone Busby, who, like his brother, has been bribed to take a dive. Gillon, however, threatens to kill Hambone’s brother, Slim, unless he is victorious in the ring. Hambone fights a vicious fight, but ultimately loses. Slim is indeed found murdered.

Palmer is enraged. His next fight is with Sonny Hawkins, who is easily dispatched.

Robby Gillon, the son of John Gillon, approaches the ring next, but then backs out under instructions from his father. His cowardice is regarded as a forfeit.

Frank Mangrum officially loses to disqualification after kicking Palmer in the groin, then hitting the referee.

Tank Miller, a gargantuan fighter, is next. He puts up a good fight, but a tiring Palmer eventually beats him.

That brings up Diggstown's best man, Hammerhead Hagan, the only fighter ever to actually beat Palmer during their professional careers. He is brought in as a surprise ringer. Gillon moved him in as a county resident just before the bet rules were established, meaning that Hagan can legally fight.

The bout is one-sided. Palmer looks done for, but he gets new motivation after seeing Diggs, who is sitting courtside, move his hand slightly (which he interprets as a show of support). Caine, not wanting to see his friend die, attempts to throw in the towel, but Palmer catches it and throws it back. Palmer rallies to knock out his opponent.

Palmer, Caine and Fitz begin their celebration of this miraculous feat. They are cut short by Gillon, who notes that his son never entered the ring -– therefore, only nine fights have transpired.

The true tenth fighter is then introduced: Minoso Torres, a tough-as-nails boxer who ruled the boxing underground in the prison from which Caine was recently released. No one has ever defeated him. Gillon admonishes Caine with: "Never try to hustle a hustler."

An exhausted Palmer is no match for Torres. But just when all looks lost, Caine whistles at Torres, gets his attention, straightens his tie and does a thumbs-down gesture (copying a move Gillon did earlier). Torres drops his gloves and invites Palmer to hit him, hitting the canvas, knocked out.

Caine was expecting such a trick from Gillon and bribed Torres long ago for a moment like this.

Gillon has lost everything. Calm at first, he snaps and pulls a gun. His son, Robby, tries to intervene and Gillon smacks him. Palmer then grabs Gillon and prepares to deck him. Instead, he turns to Hambone, claiming, "My hands hurt." Hambone gladly obliges and delivers Gillon a powerful knockout blow.

Caine congratulates Palmer. "What you did," he says, "can't be done."

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