The trailer was a trail leading obscurely, the poster was a post sufficiently inadequate, Argo was initially, and Russovoir couldn't honestly be more ashamed in admitting, an indifference. Not limited to Ben Affleck where his affleck-tion is "okay" since The Town (2010), the title, the "colorood" (color + mood) of the picture - probably even the moustaches - all contributed to the adamant withdrawal.
Russovoir even made the mistake - such unfounded audacity - it's a waste of film. Eureka, Russovoir has a friend telling, persuading him otherwise, as if the universe shall not grow older without watching an edge-of-your-seat historical feat film. It revealed a snapshot of US history, what was once was top secret, that this generation should be aware and commend the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Canada alike for. That even if deprived of the advancement and technology before, espionage has already made the engine before the wheel.
"Hi, I'm Kevin Harkin, and I'm sending you home." |
It was the best bad idea they've got, and it will work if everyone conspires. That is the very essence, the moral lesson if need be, of Argo. The number of films that shows and proves US has one of the most organized and reliable security services cannot be counted. Let alone the CIA, a government-funded organization responsible for parting a sea of information leaking onto the people who tread dry land. What descending of Air Force One (1997) is ascending of Argo, the distress is palpable as it is oddly exhilarating. Trust Russovoir he stiffened.
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