The American Spectator

home
ADVERTISEMENT
Movie Takes
Print Email
Text Size

Movie Takes

Argo

Ben Affleck’s naïveté is Hollywood’s, not America’s.

Ben Affleck’s Argo is, in a great Hollywood tradition, a movie about movies more than what it is ostensibly about, which is a based-on-fact story of international intrigue and derring-do. Mr. Affleck directs and also plays the CIA agent Tony Mendez who was given the job of exfiltrating six American diplomats hiding out in the Canadian ambassador’s residence in Tehran after the invasion of the U.S. embassy by an Iranian mob and the taking hostage of 52 of their colleagues. The better-known hostage story, which dragged on for 14 months and ended with the inauguration of President Reagan in January of 1981, offers little for a movie dramatization to bid with for an American movie audience’s cheers, but those who were sheltered for three months by the Canadians presented a more promising scenario — not only did they put one over on the Iranians, but they did it with a wacky stratagem worthy of screwball comedy.

When Mr. Mendez turned up in Tehran, it was with a cover story in which the Canadians’ “houseguests” were said to be part of a Canadian film crew scouting locations for a science fiction B-picture — presumably the Iranians would not have known that, as such, its budget was unlikely to have run to foreign location shooting — to be called Argo. The CIA had got the guy who did the prosthetics for Planet of the Apes, John Chambers (John Goodman), on board to form a front company, and the movie version adds a delightfully profane Alan Arkin as the fictional producer Lester Siegel who, as a fake himself, becomes the spokesman for Hollywood fakery. His is the best line in the picture when he explains to Mr. Affleck’s Tony Mendez why he was such a bad husband and father. “It’s a bull***t business, like coal mining; you come home to your wife and kids, and you can’t wash it off.”

As history, Argo (the real, not the fictional movie) makes a good thriller. Politically correct Hollywood finds it obligatory to insert a voiceover framing device explaining that, after thousands of years of monarchy, the Iranians found a people’s champion named Mossadegh who was to have taken back Iran’s oil wealth (from exploitative multinational oil companies, as we will understand) and returned it to the Iranians until he was overthrown by an Anglo-American sponsored coup in 1953, which installed the corrupt Shah, Reza Pahlavi, in his stead. The Shah is then said to have lived in opulence and luxury while — following the tyrant’s script — “the people starved.” Thus, when we see immediately following scenes of Iranian revolutionaries breaking into the U.S. embassy and taking our diplomats hostage — a mixture of dramatization and archive footage — we are well prepared to believe the State Department official who says, “We did it to them first.”

Nonsense. This is a familiar left-wing history which is informed by Leninist dogma about the exploitation by Western “imperialism” of less developed countries, updated to include the racial dimension to the process hypothesized by the late Edward Said. Thus when Mr. Affleck’s character approaches a Turkish official with his account of the fake movie and the fake location scouting in the Near and Middle East, the latter says to him with palpable contempt in his voice, “Ah, the exotic Orient: snake charmers, magic carpets.” To me, that line is way too obviously dragged in by the ears from Said’s “progressive” classic, Orientalism, first published only a year earlier and read mainly in Western academic circles, to ring true in this context. Besides, the childish mythology being peddled by Argo has nothing to do with the Arabian Nights but is obviously stamped, like everything else about the fictional as about the real movie, “Made in America.”

There is a certain irony about the fact that the movie’s simplistic left-wing politics is part of a more general effort on the part of the film to portray Americans as simplistic right-wing ignoramuses, naive and bumbling in their interactions with the Third World — which is not to say that some of us weren’t. Another part of the historical context that Argo wants to show us comes in snippets of contemporary TV interviews with ordinary Americans that look as if they’re genuine and express robust and bloodthirsty views as to what they would like to do to Khomeini. We are also given a clip from a period interview of the Ayatollah himself by Mike Wallace in which the latter, almost as innocent as TV’s amateur gunboat diplomatists, asks the imam (with an elaborately polite “forgive me: his words, not mine”) what he thinks of Anwar Sadat’s having described him as “a lunatic.” The lunatic’s reply is not recorded.

One of the everyman TV interviewees compares himself to the man in Network (he remembers the name of the movie but not the actor or his character) who says he’s “mad as hell” and “not going to take it anymore.” I imagine that this is to remind us of the extent to which the movies have always provided us with a context for our diplomatic interactions with the rest of the world. At one point Mr. Arkin’s Lester Siegel says of the hostage crisis: “John Wayne’s in the ground six months and this is what’s left of America.” One supposes that he is meant to be speaking only half in jest. At any rate, he provides us with a reminder of the older kind of Hollywood portrait of American power, and the more up-to-date filmmakers may even be indulging themselves in a note of genuine regret at its passing — in reality well in advance of John Wayne’s.

But the naïveté there is Hollywood’s and not America’s. It’s hard to escape the impression that this is in order to make the point that in 1979 Americans had not yet realized the extent to which they had lost standing in the world. They are living in a dream world, but one not all that different from the real world of 1953, when the global reach and prestige of American power was such as to swat away troublesome foreigners the way Mossadegh was swatted away. That, the decline of American power in the world in the quarter century between the overthrow of Mossadegh and the Iranian Islamic revolution that overthrew the Shah is the real context — and subtext — of the film, and not the left-wing caricature.

The authority we once exercised over and the discipline we could once impose on other countries — for their own good as much as ours — was gone by the late 1970s, which is why the hostage-takers were emboldened to do what they did. Moreover, it was at least as much respect for Ronald Reagan’s promise to re-assert American might in the world as it was the revolutionaries’ animus against Jimmy Carter that made them release their hostages when they did. That’s what makes putting the real-life Jimmy, taking credit for the rescue, into the movie in voiceover at the very end strike such a false note. Having established the tragi-comical nature of the whole affair for the previous two hours, it is a little late for Mr. Affleck and his good friend Mr. Carter to try to strike the heroic pose at this point. Those of us who lived through the period will remember which view of the miserable business is the more true-to-life.

One scene is crucial to our understanding not just of the film but to what it stands for in the history of American relations with the rest of the world. In real life, the operation seems to have remained undetected by the Iranians, but Mr. Affleck, working from a script by Chris Terrio, interposes various fictional obstacles to its success in order to create some suspense. One involves a confrontation between the six would-be escapers (plus their CIA escort) and a suspicious paramilitary guard at the airport who delays their departure by raising questions about the fake film, though he doesn’t know it’s a fake. At this point, the Farsi-speaking diplomat who had seemed to be the most frightened and pessimistic of the Americans — and the most skeptical about the whole improbable CIA cover story — whips out the cartoon storyboards of the fictional Argo and enthusiastically relates its preposterous story, complete with the sort of sound effects a ten-year-old might supply, to the rapt revolutionary.

It’s not unwarranted for the movie business to think that American popular culture has conquered the world where American military and diplomatic power has failed, but I wonder what the world will think of its bargain on this showing? The scene in which Lester Siegel and John Chambers go through a pile of scripts looking for one just bad enough to seem plausible is reminiscent of the comparable scene in The Producers where Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder as the eponymous producers, Max Bialystock and Leopold Bloom, do the same with equally fraudulent intentions. As in that film, we are meant to sympathize with the fraud. The difference is that The Producers depended on the (mistaken) expectation of the audience’s good taste in rejecting the awful Springtime for Hitler, whereas now we believe that the artistic nullity of this extraterrestrial fantasy is exactly what the international audience wants and can’t get enough of. I wonder if they’ll appreciate being treated as just like American teenagers any more than they did being seen by those old-timey Yanks as exotic orientals?

All this is not to say that the tale Argo has to tell is not exciting and gripping stuff, and even patriotic in an old-fashioned way. For all the hedging about our allegedly imperial past (and present), there is never any suggestion that we should not root for our guys to pull off their ruse and escape from the ruthless and bloodthirsty foreigners. In this way the real Argo is also a tribute to the fictional Argo. Looking at the world in simplistic, black-and-white terms is what Hollywood does and, therefore, it is what the success of America’s popular culture is built on. This makes America’s diplomatic history, as well as the left-wing reaction to it which the film dutifully records, more understandable. Yet another framing device has Tony Mendez estranged at the beginning from his wife and son — the boy’s enthusiasm for Planet of the Apes is what gives him the idea for the subterfuge — and reunited with them at the end. Why? I think because the belated emphasis on home and its reassuring comforts helps point the contrast with the big scary world in which the U.S., as many of us first realized in 1979-80, cannot throw its weight around as it once did. Even Ben Affleck can be at least a little sorry about that.

About the Author

James Bowman, our movie and culture critic, is a resident scholar at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. He is the author of Honor: A History and Media Madness: The Corruption of Our Political Culture, both published by Encounter Books.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (21) |

TLP| 10.30.12 @ 9:15AM

What a surprise.

I'm the only one here.

Politically Incorrect | 10.30.12 @ 9:24AM

My problem with the movie was that scenes of genuine suspense that actually happened are skipped over or handwaved away eg. The six US diplomats escaping out the back door and then wandering the streets trying to find someone who will take them in, would have made great filming. Instead its replaced with stuff that didn’t happen at all. The keystone cop chase at the end, was silly, derivative and stupid. It had everything but two guys walking out onto the field carrying a pane of glass.

squalis| 10.30.12 @ 9:32AM

I saw the movie a couple of days ago. Not knowing all the historical details of Iran and how the Shah came to power, I was skeptical of the voice-over set-up. That said, I do have 3 comments.

First, I will say the movie was for the most part enjoyable to watch. The last 1/3 was fast paced and suspensful even though the success of the escape was already known as an historical fact. If historically incorrect dramatization was added to create that suspense, I say, who cares. It's just a movie.

Second, I was struck by the portrayal of the cooperation between Hollywood and the CIA. Maybe that was not surprising in the era of John Wayne, but that is not something I would expect today. Even more surprising to me was that portrayal made by the Hollywood of today.

Lastly, Alan Arkin was wonderful (as he usually is) and is reason enough to go see Argo.

Bill8472| 10.30.12 @ 10:20AM

If you didn't know who was President during the Iranian hostage crisis, this movie wouldn't have been a lot of help. I counted six moments in the movie when fleeting (VERY fleeting) references were made to Jimmy Carter. There were split-second moments as the camera followed people moving around, when a TV in the background would show President Carter's face, and there was one moment when an actor actually mentioned the name "Carter," not linking that name with the term "President." It's possible that a more diligent watcher than I might have seen one or two more moments, but when you go to see this quite good movie, notice that Jimmy Carter is oddly absent.

At the end, when the credits are rolling, and most people will have already left the theater, you hear the voice of Jimmy Carter (just his voice, no film shots of him) extolling the heroism of the people who were actually involved in the real thing.

Bill8472| 10.30.12 @ 10:33AM

When the movie has interior shots in diplomatic offices, you don't see President Carter in pictures on the wall, you see somebody else.

Tom Kyba| 10.30.12 @ 11:34AM

I'm in no hurry to watch Aflac try to act like an actor.

Seek| 10.30.12 @ 11:54AM

"Argo" was an extremely well-made and suspenseful hostage rescue film that served double duty as a Hollywood self-parody, a la "Wag the Dog," "State and Main," "Tropic Thunder," and "Bowfinger" -- a movie, in other words, about the business of making a movie. Though unfortunately framed by voiceover political commentary -- at the end by the Sage of Plains, Georgia himself -- in every other way, "Argo" was a terrific film.

Bob Grant| 10.30.12 @ 12:42PM

I didn't see, nor do plan on watching the movie. I would, perhaps, on a boring, sports-void Saturday afternoon and a local station offered it for free.

But then again, I could come here and spend time opining on trivial things instead :-/...it would be more entertaining!

Based on the above picture, I don't believe they captured the period correctly.

The yellow/green refrigerator - Check
The wide/horizontal navy tie - Check
The corded telephone - Check
The avocado colored walls - Check
The hairstyle - Check
....

The chunky watch the Affleck character's wearing - WRONG. That's a current style, not late 70's.

Oh and the real reason I wouldn't waste time watching it is because I support no libtard's livelihood.

Bill8472| 10.30.12 @ 1:37PM

I enjoyed the moment when the mission was nearly aborted because the U.S. was going to attempt a rescue mission. That's all the reference that's made to the fiasco at Desert One, a fiasco caused by President Carter refusing to sign legislation allocating money to the armed forces to keep its equipment in good repair and thereby maximizing the odds for a disaster at some point like a military effort to rescue the hostages.

And if the rescue mission hadn't ended in disaster, what plan did the Carter administration for rescuing the six Americans in the Canadian Embassy?

Appleby| 10.30.12 @ 3:20PM

I was living in Buffalo NY at the time, and spending a lot of time in Canada because there was simply nothing to do in Buffalo. I remember this event vividly. I also remember that it was THE CANADIANS who risked the most to get our people out, and the overwhelming gratitude of the Americans, at least in the part of America where my extended family and I were living, expressed by huge banners reading THANK YOU CANADA! and enthusiastic crowds signing thank-you books that were available in public places for months after the daring rescue. I also recall that Joe Clark, who was Prime Minister at the time, risked not only his job (which he ultimately lost, through refusing to take credit for his part in the play) but his life and those of others to provide documentation and assistance in a very dangerous time and place. There was a documentary made soon after the real event, and no doubt it has been buried in favour of this revisionist nonsense.

GobBluthe| 10.30.12 @ 5:41PM

Did you see Argo? It was made clear in the movie that while it was the Canadians who got credit, the role of the CIA remained classified. Clinton declassified the CIAs role in 1997. No one outside a few people in the US and Canadian govt in 1980 until 1997 was aware of the CIA's role.

Appleby| 10.30.12 @ 6:22PM

I have not seen this movie; I see very few movies these days. Is there a book about this, that you could recommend?

Bill8472| 10.31.12 @ 9:35AM

They showed photos of the real "Thank You Canada" signs. The movie was appropriately deferential to the risk that the Canadians ran, and what they did to help our people.

Al Adab| 10.30.12 @ 4:41PM

I enjoy very much living in a town with no movie theater. It helps me avoid the popular culture which is anything but. I have seen John Carter (love the books) and Atlas II this year.

Seek| 10.30.12 @ 5:59PM

I'm not envying you. Life without cinema would be an error.

Stan Redmond| 10.30.12 @ 6:17PM

Ben Who?

bluecollarbytes| 10.30.12 @ 7:46PM

This is a different take on Argo than what Bill O Reilly called it when interviewing AFLAC! on his show- saying it was 'AFLAK'S! valentine to the CIA.'

I knew it couldn't be as simple and innocent as 'the folk's champion' said.

Mike W| 10.30.12 @ 9:14PM

Yes, Mossadeq was a dirty old Iranian that had the gall to believe that the country's resources actually belonged to the Iranians.

When we imposed the Shah we were just doing them a favor. For their own good.
When the Shah's torturers were inserting hot pokers in various bodily orifices, they were just doing those people a favor.

I don't know who this writer is but his simplistic version of Iranian/US history is 3rd grade nonsense.

Bob Grant| 10.30.12 @ 10:44PM

It's no more simplistic than your explanation of the U.S. "imposing" leaders on other countries.

You seem to be sadly naive about how the World operates.

Bill8472| 10.31.12 @ 9:41AM

I was just a kid when Mossadegh fell, but I remember my mom and dad discussing it. One point they raised, and which has been forgotten over the years is that Westerners (the Dutch, the British and the Americans) developed the oil deposits, built the wells and the refineries, and all of the oil-producing infrastructure. It was only when the oil industry had been formed and the mechanics put in place at the cost of what must have been hundreds of billions of dollars, that the nations of the Middle East nationalized their oil.

They made sure that the West had put all of the essential mechanisms in place before they grabbed it for themselves without paying a dime to the private businesses that they had INVITED into their countries to take the oil from the ground, refine it and then sell it.

Bill8472| 10.31.12 @ 9:44AM

Because of that little bit of Middle Eastern theft, I can't really summon up a lot of indignation over the CIA's coup.

After all, a coup wouldn't have been successful, even with the all-powerful CIA's involvement, if the majority of the people weren't OK with it.

More Articles by James Bowman

More Articles From Movie Takes

http://spectator.org/archives/2012/10/30/argo

ADVERTISEMENT

SPONSORED LINKS

FLASHBACK TO: 1995

Clip of the Day

ADVERTISEMENT