from SLATE:
Argo, F--k Yourself

This year’s worst Best Picture nominee.

By Kevin B. Lee|Posted Monday, Feb. 25, 2013, at 11:00 AM

[Not every critic was pleased to see Argo win Best Picture last night.
After its nomination was announced last month, Kevin B. Lee trashed
the film. His article is reprinted below. -- SLATE]

Now that Ben Affleck’s Iran hostage drama Argo has garnered seven
Oscar nominations to add to its mantel, upon which already sit $110
million in domestic box office, near unanimous acclaim from critics,
and even a whisper campaign for Affleck to run for John Kerry’s
soon-to-be vacated Senate seat, it needs to be said: Argo is a fraud.

Sure, Argo’s an easily consumable mashup of well-worn genres (exotic
adventurer, political caper flick, derelict daddy redemption movie,
Hollywood insider satire) whose geopolitical themes make it feel smart
and important. One could even say that it’s good at what it does:
giving these old Hollywood formulas a fresh coat of vintage 1970s
paint (color: avocado). But this tactic is what makes the film not
merely overrated, but reprehensible. Its modest achievements point to
larger failures both in the film and in Hollywood’s ability to regard
the world honestly.

Perhaps my disgust wouldn’t be as intense if it weren’t for the
potentially great film suggested by Argo’s opening sequence: a history
of pre-revolutionary Iran told through eye-catching storyboards. The
sequence gives a compelling (if sensationalized) account of how the
CIA’s meddling with Iran's government over three decades led to a
corrupt and oppressive regime, eventually inciting the 1979
revolution. The sequence even humanizes the Iranian people as victims
of these abuses. This opening may very well be the reason why critics
have given the film credit for being insightful and
progressive—because nothing that follows comes close, and the rest of
the movie actually undoes what this opening achieves.

Instead of keeping its eye on the big picture of revolutionary Iran,
the film settles into a retrograde “white Americans in peril”
storyline. It recasts those oppressed Iranians as a raging,
zombie-like horde, the same dark-faced demons from countless other
movies— still a surefire dramatic device for instilling fear in an
American audience. After the opening makes a big fuss about how
Iranians were victimized for decades, the film marginalizes them from
their own story, shunting them into the role of villains. Yet this
irony is overshadowed by a larger one: The heroes of the film, the
CIA, helped create this mess in the first place. And their triumph is
executed through one more ruse at the expense of the ever-dupable
Iranians to cap off three decades of deception and manipulation.

Argo makes the Iran hostage crisis, one of the most cataclysmic
episodes in U.S. foreign affairs in the last 50 years, a mere backdrop
to a silver-lining subplot—one that even Robert Anders, one of the
Argo hostages, admitted was a “footnote.” The film thus distorts and
belittles an event that transformed U.S. history. Ironically, the
larger narrative of the hostage crisis would make for a more
compelling movie from both a plot and action standpoint: A great
filmmaker could make an amazing sequence of Operation Eagle Claw, a
failed rescue mission that resulted in two helicopter crashes, several
dead U.S. soldiers, and a subsequent overhaul of U.S. military
operations. Imagine the last act of Zero Dark Thirty, but with an
unhappy ending.

I’m not naive. I know such a film wouldn’t go over well with the home
audience. And I’m not demanding that Hollywood make a movie about Iran
as bracing and uncommercial as Jafar Panahi’s This Is Not a Film, my
top movie of 2012 and a true reflection of Iran's reality, using all
the resourceful invention that's missing in Argo. But apologists will
argue that a film like Argo is the best we could hope for in depicting
this episode of history, which makes the film less about history than
about our national addiction to happy endings in movies. Argo is
ostensibly about how a fake movie saves lives, and thus about the
redemptive power of movies at large. But since it’s about a fake
movie, it’s not really about moviemaking—it’s about the power of
Hollywood bullshit. Instead of a real filmmaker, we get Alan Arkin’s
wise-guy hack producer dispensing chestnuts over how to create hype
and attention to make it seem like a film is important— lessons Argo’s
promoters no doubt took to heart. (My favorite Argo publicity factoid
is that Ben Affleck majored in Middle Eastern studies. No one mentions
that he didn’t graduate.) Arkin’s remarks may very well be an accurate
insight into how Hollywood really works, but they reflect the movie’s
smug complacency over its ability to pull its gilded wool over our
eyes.

Looking at the runaway success of this film, it seems as if critics
and audiences alike lack the historical knowledge to recognize a
self-serving perversion of an unflattering past, or the cultural
acumen to see the utterly ersatz nature of the enterprise: A cast of
stock characters and situations, and a series of increasingly
contrived narrow escapes from third world mobs who, predictably, are
never quite smart enough to catch up with the Americans. We can
delight all we like in this cinematic recycling act, but the fact
remains that we are no longer living in a world where we can get away
with films like this—not if we want to be in a position to deal with a
world that is rising to meet us. The movies we endorse need to rise to
the occasion of reflecting a new global reality, using a newer set of
storytelling tools than this reheated excuse for a historical
geopolitical thriller.

Late in the movie, Affleck’s CIA agent dazzles Iranian soldiers at a
checkpoint with storyboards from his fake sci-fi production. The scene
plays into the hoary sentiment uttered at every Academy Awards
ceremony, one surely to be repeated with each Oscar Argo wins: People
across the world are movie fans at heart. But like Oscar night, the
scene is really a reflection of Hollywood’s hubris in trumpeting its
own power. This moment, of course, is more bullshit, a self-serving
fantasy concocted by the screenwriter. But it reminds us of Argo’s
opening sequence, when it was us dazzled into submission by a series
of storyboards. A razzle-dazzle con job worthy of its CIA subject,
Argo thinks of you just like it thinks of those buffoonish Iranian
soldiers: too easily impressed with a flimsy fabrication to see beyond
it.


-- 
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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