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Diggstown Poster

Diggstown

Where the pros meet the cons.
1992 | 98m | English

(8677 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

Gabriel Caine has just been released from prison when he sets up a bet with a business man who owns most of Diggstown, a boxing-mad town. The bet is that Gabe can find a boxer that will knock out 10 Diggstown men, in a boxing ring, within 24 hours. Roy 'Honey' Palmer is that man that, at 48, many say he is too old.
Release Date: Aug 14, 1992
Director: Michael Ritchie
Writer: Leonard Wise, Steven McKay
Genres: Comedy, Drama
Keywords transporter, con man, sports, boxing
Production Companies Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Box Office Revenue: $4,836,637
Budget: $17,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
James Woods Gabriel Caine
Louis Gossett Jr. "Honey" Roy Palmer
Oliver Platt Fitz
Heather Graham Emily Forrester
Randall "Tex" Cobb Wolf Forrester
Thomas Wilson Brown Robby Gillon
Bruce Dern John Gillon
Marshall Bell Warden Bates
Duane Davis Hambone Busby
Willie Green Hammerhead Hagan
Orestes Matacena Victor Corsini
Kim Robillard Sheriff Stennis
John Short Corny 'Buster' Robbins
Michael McGrady Frank Mangrum
Roger Hewlett Sam Lester
Rocky Pepeli Buck Holland
Jeff Benson Tank Miller
Jim Caviezel Billy Hargrove
Frank Collison Prison Guard
Raymond C. Turner Slim Busby
Wilhelm von Homburg Charles Macum Diggs
George D. Wallace Bob Ferris
John Walter Davis Chet Willis
Alex Garcia Minoso Torres
Cynthia L. James Mary Palmer
Kenneth White Ben Culver
David Fresco Fish
Benny Urquidez Referee
Jeremy Roberts Sonny
Michael DeLorenzo Paulo
Troy Smith Betting Guard
Larry Ham Betting Guard
David Candreva Coach
Jose Alcala Boxing Kid
Victor Koliacos Boxing Kid
Nelly Bly Emily's Friend
Laura Mae Tate Marcy
Kevin LaRosa Helicopter Pilot
Name Job
Michael Ritchie Director
Alex Desir Stunts
Deborah La Mia Denaver Makeup & Hair
Leonard Wise Novel
Gerry Fisher Director of Photography
David Kelley Second Assistant Director
Bobby Bass Fight Choreographer
Denorvell Collier Stunts
Steven McKay Screenplay
Richard Pagano Casting
Don Zimmerman Editor
Art Schaefer Unit Production Manager, Line Producer
Wayne A. Finkelman Costume Designer
Okowita Art Direction
Michael W. Devine Set Designer
Joseph A. Ponticelle Second Assistant Camera
Jamie Barber First Assistant "B" Camera
Gary A. Theard Boom Operator
Chip Fowler Production Coordinator
Luke Reichle Costume Supervisor
Melinda Leeson Set Costumer
Ken Chase Prosthetic Makeup Artist, Key Makeup Artist
Gigi Coker Makeup & Hair
Mark Lilienthal Special Effects Supervisor
Kirk Schuler Sound Editor
Harry Cheney Foley Editor
Zane D. Bruce Foley Artist
Rick Hart Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Jackie Krost Music Consultant
Brad Dechter Orchestrator
Rusty Smith Art Direction
Stephen Hendrickson Production Design
Thomas J. Mack First Assistant Director
Barbara Drake Set Decoration
Richard Foreman Jr. Still Photographer
Beau Baker Boom Operator
Dan Coffie Second Second Assistant Director
Eden Clark Coblenz Set Costumer
Lisa Grace Erndt Set Costumer
Dennis Glas Makeup Artist
Kevin Nolting First Assistant Editor
Don S. Walden Sound Editor
Thomas J. O'Connell ADR Mixer
David Williams Foley Editor
Joseph T. Sabella Foley Artist
Frank A. Montaño Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Sharal Churchill Music Consultant
Robert Schaper Scoring Mixer
Sib Ventress Assistant Production Coordinator
Gregory Van Horn Set Designer
Jeffrey R. Clark First Assistant Camera
George Stephenson "B" Camera Operator
Kim H. Ornitz Sound Mixer
Judith Saunders Script Supervisor
C.C. Barnes Additional Second Assistant Director
Sybil Gray Set Costumer
Gil Hernandez Assistant Costume Designer
Nina Paskowitz Key Hair Stylist
Don Hall Supervising Sound Editor
John O. Wilde Sound Editor
Kurt Courtland Assistant Sound Editor
Jackson Schwartz Foley Mixer
Donald O. Mitchell Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Gary Ritchie Sound Recordist
Ellen Segal Music Editor
Tim Healey Production Supervisor
Carole Buglewicz Casting Assistant
Steven Lambert Stunts
Jeffrey J. Dashnaw Stunts
Sharon Bialy Casting
Debi Manwiller Casting
James Newton Howard Original Music Composer
Jimmy Nickerson Fight Choreographer
Chuck Waters Stunts
Bill Roe Camera Operator
Dennis Smith "B" Camera Operator
R.J. Kizer ADR Editor
Name Title
Robert Schaffel Producer
Sharon Roesler Associate Producer
Steven McKay Associate Producer
Youssef Vahabzadeh Co-Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 17 29 9
2024 5 17 37 8
2024 6 14 20 8
2024 7 17 35 10
2024 8 12 31 5
2024 9 10 15 5
2024 10 13 34 6
2024 11 10 16 6
2024 12 12 30 6
2025 1 10 21 6
2025 2 7 11 3
2025 3 5 11 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 1 1 0
2025 8 1 1 0
2025 9 2 2 1
2025 10 2 4 1

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Reviews

John Chard
10.0

Do you know the difference between a hustler and a good con-man? Diggstown (also known as Midnight Sting) is directed by Michael Ritchie and stars James Woods, Louis Gossett Junior, Bruce Dern, Heather Graham, Oliver Platt, a pre-fame James Caviezel and Randall "Tex" Cobb. The plot sees Woods as ... con-man Gabriel Caine, recently out of prison he and his cohort Fitz (Platt), set up a boxing "sting" in Diggstown, a hickville place out in Olivair County that is run by egomaniac John Gillon (Dern). The set-up entails Caine's old friend Honey Roy Palmer (Gossett Jr) having to fight, and beat, 10 Diggstown men in one day. As the money goes down and secrets come out, corruption and violence is never far away. Midnight Sting was one of those film's that came to my attention in the early hours of one morning. I couldn't sleep and turned the TV on out of pure frustration at a lack of sleep. What I didn't know at that time of irksome sleepy annoyance was that I would fall in love with a movie, a love that lasts to this very day. The TV announcer said the name of the movie and that it stars James Woods. Since Woods is always value for money I thought I would give it a go, for the next 98 minutes I laughed out loud, I cringed at some sad moments and I punched the air on more than one occasion. It quickly became one of my favourite movies of all time. On the surface it looks a very simple tale, but it has so much more to offer outside of the excellent fight sequences and some belting one liners. Based on Leonard Wise's novel "The Diggstown Ringers", the film deals in loyalties, friendships, greed, power, corruption and lies - not to mention small town mentality being under the microscope. It's impeccably acted as well, with the Woods and Gossett play off one of the most engaging duets of the 1990s. The twists within, and there are some corkers, really crown what was already a smart and witty script. It was a film that went largely unnoticed upon its release, and even now in this age of rampant internet usage it appears to still be under seen or sadly forgotten. It of course will not become a personal favourite of all newcomers to it, but just maybe one day if you can't sleep or you are stuck for a rental then you should give it a chance. Because it deserves a chance to at least try to welcome you into its fan club. I love it, you know that by now, and there's a chance that you will too. Punch the air brilliant. 10/10

May 16, 2024