The “secrets” here are in fact well
known, having made headline news
across the world in 2019: the discovery in the Saqqara necropolis,
just outside Cairo, of scores of mummified animals, including a lion cub, and
an untouched tomb from the 25th century BC.
But what makes this an exceptional
documentary is the focus on the entirely Egyptian archaeological team, doing
their bit in a quiet way to decolonise Egyptology and to demonstrate the
emotional connection between the locals and the ancient civilisation they are
unearthing.
In truth,
excavating the pharaonic monuments has always been a multinational affair, with
dig teams from all over the world pitching in.
But the dominant images of
British chaps in pith helmets or the Indiana Jones-style maverick are hard to
dispel; this film’s aim, apart from simple wonderment at what the excavators
find, is to assert Egyptian ownership of the country’s heritage and history.
And it does
it really rather well, if you filter out the somewhat superfluous
race-against-time narrative that has been added over the top.
Much more
effective are the meditative interviews the film-makers conduct across the
whole team, from the excavation director to the anthropologist working on
skeletal reassembly to the digger’s foreman.
Another tiny gripe: the
interviewees are introduced only by their first names, a slightly patronising
move which means it takes some disentangling to find out that they are in fact
world experts in their fields.
The film’s
richly coloured photography, precisely defined sense of topography and nicely
conceived illustrations combine seamlessly to make clear what could be a
confusing welter of information from two parallel digs.
The finds are
extraordinary, and the commentaries on them by the participants are equally
wonderful. This is fascinating stuff, smoothly put together, and carrying
genuine human interest.
Source:theguardian
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