Friday, February 22, 2013

It's what we say we want: The Oscar case *for* Argo.

Argo (review) is not my favorite film of the year.  It didn't even make my best-of-2012 list.  It had to settle for the Runner-Ups section along with fellow nominee/front-runner Lincoln, a choice that caused no end of consternation from my mother-in-law who considers both to among her favorite films of 2012.  My favorite film of 2012 is Cabin In the Woods, a film that had about as much of a chance of winning Best Picture this year as Kung Fu Panda 2 did last year.  My favorite film among those nominated is Zero Dark Thirty, which went from front-runner to also-ran after Sony made the financial choice to not fight back against the frankly shameful 'this film endorses torture!' arguments until after the film's wide release.  There are a few films that are nominated that I don't care for (Les Miserables, Silver Linings Playbook), but I'd have to say that if we're picking a Best Picture on a the basis of what film most positively represents the year that was 2012, Argo is the best and most logical choice.

As I've written before, 2012 brought about the full-scale return of "the movie".  By that I mean the mid-budget, major-studio genre vehicle that used to be the industry's bread-and-butter.  As I also discussed way back in June, 2012 also brought the return of the R-rating.  After a decade of post-Columbine fear and four-quadrant obsession, major studios have begun to release mainstream films with the once seemingly-scarlet R as a matter of course.  It's not just violent action pictures or gruesome horror films, but mainstream films that don't necessarily require an R but nonetheless signal that they are intended for adult audiences.  Finally, with a few exceptions, 2012 solidified a certain fiscal sanity in terms of budgets, something that arguably began in 2011.  Oh the blockbusters still cost hundreds-of-millions of dollars, but we saw reasonable costs for middle-of-the-road studio fare, budgets that meant that a film didn't need to become a global blockbuster or even play to all potential audience demographics to become a hit.  Argo represents a top-notch example of all three positive developments.

It is R-rated not because its content required it but because it was an adult movie made for grownup audiences, another emerging trend in 2012.  It is not bathed in gore or drowning in sexual content.  Yes it is profane, and the film's catch phrase ("Argo fuck yourself!") required the R-rating, but that was a choice that Warner Bros. allowed the filmmakers to make without interference.  Argo could very easily have been a PG-13 picture with minimal artistic compromise.  But Warner Bros. allowed the film to go out as R just because it was the appropriate designation for the adult political thriller.  It also delivered top-notch entertainment value and incredibly authentic production design at just $45 million.  Thus, the film is already incredibly profitable just on the $127 million it's taken in the US alone, to say nothing of its $200 million+ global take and eventual home-viewing profits to come.  Most importantly, Argo is just a damn-good movie. It's intelligent, thoughtful, and just a little nutritious.  It isn't political but still manages to include politics and a potent history lesson wrapped up in a mainstream popcorn entertainment.  It's exactly the kind of movie that we say we want from the studios every time we roll our eyes at another alleged franchise reboot or needless sequel.

Argo is a populist mainstream genre entry of uncommon craft and intelligence, rooted in character and narrative.  It is It is R-rated purely because it is intended for adults.  It is cheap enough that its solid grosses will make the film hugely profitable for its backers, encouraging other such films of its ilk to be financed.  In terms of the best representation of the best of what the year in film of 2012 had to offer, Argo is absolutely the movie of the year.

Scott Mendelson                  

No comments:

LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails

Labels