Thursday 20 Jun
 
 

Terror on a Train

Not to be confused with the ’80s slasher Terror Train — but, oh, how I wish it were! — 1952's Terror on a Train finds Glenn Ford (Superman: The Movie's Pa Kent) as Peter Lyncort, a bomb diffuser whose home life with his spouse (French actress Anne Vernon) is currently as explosive as his work life.
06/20/2013 | Comments 0

The Monk

For several years, I’ve intended to read Matthew G. Lewis' 1796 novel, The Monk. I even bought a snazzy trade-paperback edition with an introduction from Stephen King. Never got around to cracking it open.
06/20/2013 | Comments 0

The Last Exorcism Part II

Unlike many moviegoers, 17-year-old farm girl Nell Sweetzer (Ashley Bell, The Day) has no memory of the events of The Last Exorcism, a found-footage smash of three years prior. The Last Exorcism Part II finds her taking steps to build life anew, beginning in a boarding house for troubled girls, where the deeply devout Nell is exposed to such heretofore corrupting influences as lipstick and rock music and YouTube and cotton candy.
06/19/2013 | Comments 0

The ABCs of Death

Suspense novelist Jeffery Deaver once praised the short-story format, writing that the minimal time investment on the part of the reader allows the writer to get away with endings he or she cannot in the long form. In other words, the writer can be meaner, more devious. He's absolutely right, and the theory applies wholesale to The ABCs of Death, more or less a horror anthology depicting "26 ways to die."
06/19/2013 | Comments 0

Ninja III: The Domination

Don't ask why Ninja III: The Domination begins with a ninja assault on a municipal golf course. Just be grateful it does. You also may wonder why its sex scene employs a can of V8: Don't question it. Just lie back and enjoy it.
06/14/2013 | Comments 0
Home · Articles · Movies · Thriller · Argo
Thriller

Argo


As a director, Ben Affleck ratchets up the tension in this fact-based thriller.

Phil Bacharach October 15th, 2012

Generating suspense from a story that is a matter of historical record is no easy thing. That was the primary challenge facing Ben Affleck and Chris Terrio, the director-star and writer, respectively, of Argo, a thriller inspired by a real-life covert operation that helped rescue six U.S. embassy workers out of Iran during the 1979 hostage crisis. It's a testament to the skills of the filmmakers that Argo delivers a deluge of suspense even when its ending is never in doubt.

argo

There’s no way the movie industry could have resisted this stranger-than-fiction yarn. The film chronicles how CIA operative Tony Mendez (Affleck) saved the six by establishing a phony cover story that they were a Canadian movie crew scouting locations in Tehran for a science-fiction cheapie titled Argo. Details of that real-life mission would not be declassified until 1997.

Affleck already has demonstrated he’s well past the days of being a Gigli joke. His previous directorial efforts, Gone Baby Gone and The Town, were well-oiled thrill machines that didn’t skimp on characterization. The international intrigue of Argo is considerably more ambitious, but Affleck does an admirable job sticking to the basics of classical storytelling.

A concise prologue explains the Iranians’ anti-American rage in November 1979, when the reviled Shah fled to the U.S. in the wake of a popular uprising. Angry mobs surround and eventually storm the U.S. embassy, holding 52 American hostages captive for 444 days. In the midst of that initial chaos, six embassy workers find a hideout in the home of the Canadian ambassador (Victor Garber, Milk).

The CIA, tasked with rescuing the half-dozen before the Iranians discover them, have no good options. Then Mendez catches Battle for the Planet of the Apes on TV one evening, and inspiration strikes. He contacts Apes makeup artist John Chambers (John Goodman, The Artist), who has done contract work for the intelligence agency in the past, and devises one of those it’s-so-crazy-it-just-might-work schemes.

With the help of a crusty movie producer (Alan Arkin, The Change-Up), the CIA creates a fake production company. Mendez, posing as a Canadian producer, will fly to Iran, get the embassy workers and return them safely to America. State Department officials are skeptical, but Mendez’s CIA boss (Bryan Cranston, TV’s Breaking Bad) backs the cockamamie operation: “This is the best bad idea we have, by far.”

Argo plays fast and loose with the facts, which seems only fitting for a film commemorating the real-life heroics of moviemaking fantasia. There isn’t a drop of potential suspense that the film doesn’t bleed dry, and the parade of chases and close calls does teeter toward being a bit much by the time all is said and done.

Still, that’s a minor quibble. Argo is smart, tense and surprisingly funny, buoyed by the terrific comic timing of Goodman and Arkin. And the stakes couldn’t be any higher. Argo falls short of being the masterpiece that much of its Oscar buzz would have you believe, but it is still a blast, a crowd-pleaser for grown-ups.

Hey! Read This:
Breaking Bad: The Complete Fourth Season Blu-ray review  
The Town film review   


 
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
 
 

 

 
 
 
Close
Close
Close