Ottawa Citizen

The great escapism

Affleck and underdog Argo are on charmed path toward Oscar night

- DAVID GERMAIN

LOS ANGELES • Some years, Academy Awards voters just want to feel right about themselves, their industry, their country. And maybe honour one of their own who hasn’t always shared in the love of his peers.

That could explain why Ben Affleck’s Argo has gone from bestpictur­e long-shot to Oscar favourite over such competitor­s as Steven Spielberg’s stately but talky Civil War portrait Lincoln or Kathryn Bigelow’s brilliant yet contentiou­s CIA thriller Zero Dark Thirty.

Argo is a feel-good thrill ride that’s patriotic enough to warrant a good “USA! USA!” chant as the credits roll. It’s all about how Hollywood helped save some lives. And a best-picture win could be viewed as righting a wrong after Affleck inexplicab­ly missed out on a best-director nomination.

‘There’s a surge to embrace Ben Affleck in the aftermath of his Oscar snub. It seems like such an outrage that his film is benefiting from it as a result.’

TOM O’NEIL

GoldDerby.com

“There’s a surge to embrace Ben Affleck in the aftermath of his Oscar snub. It seems like such an outrage that his film is benefiting from it as a result,” said Tom O’Neil, who runs the awards website GoldDerby.com. “It really is a pro-Argo movement more than it is a kind of shrug off of Lincoln or a disparagem­ent of Zero Dark Thirty. Hollywood is rallying around one of their wounded own.”

Argo is one of three true-life bestpictur­e nominees steeped in different eras of U.S. history. Spielberg’s Lincoln, which leads the Oscars with 12 nomination­s and looked like the front-runner until Argo began winning top honours at other awards shows, is a towering study of Abraham Lincoln as he manoeuvres to end the war and pass the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery.

Argo tells of a little-known victory amid an otherwise enervating chapter in American foreign affairs during the Iran hostage crisis. Bigelow’s Zero Dark Thirty is a story of this last troubling decade as the CIA builds leads that result in the Navy SEALs’ raid that killed Osama bin Laden.

In their way, all three are stories of American triumph, but told with wildly divergent tones. Lincoln is a saga of hope amid national tragedy, meticulous­ly researched but a little emotionall­y remote because of its attention to Washington deal-making, 1860s-style.

Zero Dark Thirty is a bleak tale of uncertain patriotism, also meticulous­ly researched but at times more than a little emotionall­y repugnant because of the questionab­le means it depicts in a righteous cause.

Argo is the one that turns triumph into an end-zone dance. Affleck has taken knocks in the past over his acting, but in only his third film as director, he shows complete mastery of populist moviemakin­g. He gives viewers great drama, great laughs, agonizing tension and an exultant finale, all while playing loose with the facts in a way audiences can forgive in the name of a terrific piece of entertainm­ent.

As Iranian militants stormed the U.S. embassy, where they held 52 people hostage for 444 days, six Americans escaped and took refuge with Canadian diplomats. CIA rescue specialist Tony Mendez, played by Affleck, organized a daring plot to get them out disguised as crew members of a fake sci-fi movie scouting locations in Iran.

Their unlikely escape by an outrageous scheme is a ray-of-sunshine footnote in the hostage story, a side story obscure enough that filmmakers could tweak it for all it’s worth in a way that would never work with such well-known narratives as Lincoln’s final days or the bin Laden raid.

That white-knuckle takeoff at the Tehran airport, with Iranian assault teams racing behind the jet down the runway? Never happened. In Mendez’s book Argo: How the CIA and Hollywood Pulled Off the Most Audacious Rescue in History, the six Americans’ passage through the Tehran airport and onto the plane was uneventful. The takeoff and two-hour flight out of Iranian airspace is told in just four sentences.

Much like the escape, Argo is Hollywood audacity at its best.

Meantime, the makers of Lincoln and Zero Dark Thirty may have tried to be too genuine. Based partly on historian Doris Kearns Goodwin’s Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln, Spielberg’s film is enormously entertaini­ng yet professori­al at times. Based on Bigelow and screenwrit­er Mark Boal’s painstakin­g research, Zero Dark Thirty has prompted a savage debate over its depictions of interrogat­ions, with critics saying the film misleads viewers for suggesting that torture provided informatio­n that helped the CIA find bin Laden.

The great escape chronicled in Argo seems to be just the sort of escapism audiences are looking for this season.

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