Argo
Directed by: Ben Affleck
Written by: Chris Terrio (screenplay), Joshuah Bearman (article)
Starring: Ben Affleck, Bryan Cranston, Alan Arkin and John Goodman
I think Argo is going to win Best Picture, if the studios play their marketing cards smartly and don’t push too hard before the end of the year. This isn’t because it’s the best movie of the year, but it’s the kind of movie that Academy voters can agree on. It’s very suspenseful, it has a good ensemble cast decked out in ’70s hair and it’s in part about Hollywood helping rescue hostages in Iran.
Ben Affleck has been steadily building up his directing chops in his previous features Gone Baby Gone and The Town, and in leaving contemporary Boston behind here he has created his most assured movie yet. Argo is consistently engaging, from its washed out ’70s look to its fluid, precisely orchestrated camera movements. The first 20 minutes, where the U.S. embassy in Iran is stormed by protesters, are brilliantly conceived.
For the rest of the movie, Affleck tends to shower attention on himself, though his performance isn’t showy or obnoxious. Bryan Cranston and John Goodman show up in brief, underwritten parts, but the only one who is allowed to steal the show is Alan Arkin’s cranky movie producer. When Tony Mendez (Affleck) pitches the idea of rescuing six embassy employees who escaped the hostage crisis by having them pretend to be a movie crew, Arkin’s Lester Siegel gives him a cynic’s guide to Hollywood.
Tony Mendez is a fairly typical career type. He’s separated from his wife, he’s endlessly reassuring and determined and he always appears exhausted. The way Affleck approaches the era and the material recalls Zodiac because he avoids glamorizing most of the characters and the plot and finds suspense in Chris Terrio’s script without inventing it. The only verbally clever characters are the Hollywood types, which may be the movie’s biggest stretch.
Affleck largely avoids pigeonholing any one group in the movie, most crucially the Iranians. Argo has the immediacy of being shot on location, especially in a tense fake location tour in a market that quickly escalates, but it never overtly vilifies the culture like so many evening news broadcasts. It is not a penetrating window into it like last year’s A Separation, because Affleck attempting that wouldn’t fall under the bounds of artistic license.
Though the Argo mission was declassified by President Clinton in 1997, the movie was made now when Iran is present almost daily in the news. Affleck’s smart handling of the material prevents it from being some sort of American propaganda. Mendez is a man who exfiltrates people from dangerous situations. He’s not James Bond or Jason Bourne, but a smart, semi-pudgy spy with intelligence and a hell of a lot of courage.
Grade: B
Definitely seems like a flick that more people admire for being a really good, true story, rather than being a really good movie. It’s not a bad flick by any means, but not as perfect as many people are praising it as being. Good review.
I agree. The Oscar for Best Picture the past few years is basically the most likable movie and not the best made one.
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