However you feel about the recent casting of Ben Affleck as Batman, it’s definitely near objectively depressing news to hear that he is no longer attached to the epic film production of Stephen King’s The Stand. Affleck is replaced by Scott Cooper(Crazy Heart), who will also rewrite the script. Apparently Affleck is tied to a non-cape-related project with Warner Bros and had to drop out of the project. While I certainly enjoyed the television miniseries (in all of its occasionally cheesy glory), I was really excited to see a proven talent like Affleck take on a project of this magnitude.
Months ago, Affleck confessed to hitting a road block with the adaptation, so I suppose it’s better that he was replaced than to have the movie canned completely, but it hits hard to see another King-project, especially a film based on another one of his best works, swirling around development hell after the dream of a Dark Tower movie fizzling out so unspectacularly.
King fans will just have to hope Doctor Sleep is great enough to make us forget about going to the movies or wait for Kimberly Pierce’s turn at a Carrie film to hold us over until the next bad DKU news. Check out The Stand miniseries on Netflix if you get a shot because it’s one of the best of his made for TV adaptations.
I just got around to watching Argo. Although terribly inaccurate Argo is a tense, oh-my-god-I-feel-nervous thriller. Ben Affleck is well on his way to becoming a great director (so far). He is similar to Clint Eastwood, although Eastwood is a good actor and a good director, Affleck is a meh actor and a great director. I suppose it all balances out.
Argo is about Tony Mendez, the CIA operative who led six United States diplomats out of Iran during the 1979 Iranian hostage crisis. Not having been born in 1979, Argo helped fill in some gaps and also helped clarify a great deal of Iran and Americas strained relationship. The problem being that Argo definitely paints America as the hero, Iran as the villain, and Canada as some strange bystander. In reality Canada was the hero, Iran was the semi-villain, and America kinda came in near the end and helped a bit. Aside from this, the story very closely follows the timeline and actual events of the situation even though several nail-biting sequences are thrown in to help up the tension for the audience. I guess the movie does say “Based on a true story” and not “100% the factual truth”. Whatevs.
The thing that really sells the concept is that Americas involvement at all was classified information until 1997, when former President Clinton declassified the information. Until then the sole credit of the operation went to Canada to prevent further complications to the hostage situation. The CIA basically helped get the hostages out by sending in Tony Mendez to play a fake film director of a fake sci-fi movie called Argo to rescue the six diplomats by teaching them to play fake writers, fake camera men, and fake directors. They also had a fake press conference to make Hollywood believe the movie was real along with fake posters, a fake script, and fake producers. Then they were simply to stroll they the heavily guarded airport with fake credentials, fake tickets, and fake identities. So up until 1997 people never knew this movie was a fake and that it simply had been stopped mid-production like so many other films. This makes for a unique thriller with an extra edge of mystery to it.
I definitely think you should watch this movie, with the only fault I have being that the movie is non-stop build up and the ending is just the inevitable sweet release. It doesn’t quite satisfy the story other than simply letting it up and then quickly ending it. Also Alan Arkin’s performance was garnering a lot of high praise and I didn’t find it anything above the norm. John Goodman is in the movie a little too if that’s your thing?
Here is to hoping that Ben continues to direct excellent movies. Since this movie has been out quite some time I am not going to assign a number score, but I definitely recommend it.