Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Ben Hurrah

Argo finds Ben Affleck once again showing his skills as a director of suspense

Scott Renshaw

It seems absurd to those who still associate him with Daredevil, J-Lo and Gigli, but when our backs were all turned, Ben Affleck became a Serious Filmmaker.

That’s not the same as saying he just decided to make Serious Films; it’s easy enough to jump on board projects that seem pre-packaged with prestige. Instead, he launched his career as a director with low-key, character-based genre fare — tense crime-fiction narratives that were also smart, efficient and restrained. Throw in the impressive resume-building detail that he guided two Oscar-nominated performances in his first two films as a director — Amy Ryan in Gone Baby Gone and Jeremy Renner in The Town — and the transformation seemed complete.

When “a film by Ben Affleck” was making its way to theaters, people wouldn’t be rolling their eyes; they’d be sussing out the prospects for gold statuettes.

Argo seems like a perfect fit for Affleck in its human-scale suspense, with the added cachet of an improbable real-life story. In November 1979, as Iranian students take over the American embassy in Tehran, six Americans managed to sneak out a back door and find refuge in the home of the Canadian ambassador. Two months later, time is running out to bring the hidden refugees home, and the intelligence community’s options aren’t good. So CIA analyst Tony Mendez (Affleck) comes up with a seemingly absurd plan: He’ll fly into Iran and have the six Americans pose as part of a Canadian film crew scouting locations for a science-fiction film titled Argo. As one of the skeptical would-be escapees responds, “Is this where we say, ‘It’s so crazy it just might work?’”

It is crazy — and funny — and some of Argo’s most satisfying moments come from Mendez working with his Hollywood contacts to set up a convincing fake movie. Alan Arkin gets the juiciest material as a veteran producer whose expertise manifests itself in a savvy negotiation with the company that owns the rights to the script they want. For a film that’s got to shoehorn in a mess of politics and history, Argo generally clicks along with satisfying, crowd-pleasing style.

What Affleck doesn’t have here is a screenplay with a ready-made structure like the novel adaptations he had for Gone Baby Gone and The Town. That’s a problem when it’s deemed necessary to give Mendez some kind of personal back story, specifically a young son and an estranged wife. The subplot feels like a forced attempt at making his mission more “personal,” perhaps somehow connected to the long night of soul-searching we see when he’s informed that the government is shutting down the operation for fear of jeopardizing the planned military rescue of the other American hostages.

At the point where the narrative should be getting most focused on the logistics of the escape, Argo starts to feel cluttered as it bounces between Mendez and his charges, the suits in Washington (including Bryan Cranston as Mendez’s boss) trying to get the mission re-approved, the producers in Hollywood waiting for a call to support the cover story, and Iranians trying to reconstruct shredded documents to see if they can identify whether any Americans are missing.

But when it matters most, Affleck nails the scenes that require building maximum suspense. Affleck as a director may not be able to overcome every limitation of his raw material, but he’s got an enviable skill set as a filmmaker: rendering anxiety as action, and turning difficult stories into mass-market entertainment. And he can do it while making you forget about Gigli

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