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Argo: Fact, Fiction & Filmmaking

As many of you know, I have been working on a documentary for the last year.  It is my first endeavor into filmmaking, and so I spend a lot of time watching other films to see what makes a good film good.  I saw the critically acclaimed film Argo the other day, which was a really good film.  Being a foreign policy geek and knowing a few things already about this little known story from the Iran Hostage Crisis, I went into the movie wanting to like it.  Argo has all the base elements for a fantastic film – suspense, bravery and redemption with a splash of Hollywood parody.  Also, this movie could not be more important in today’s geopolitical environment.  Embassy killings and hostile US relations with Iran seem to be as relevant today as they were in 1979.

However, after watching Argo, I began to realize that the film was very “loosely based” on both a 2007 Wired Magazine article and a memoir by the real Tony Mendez.  In fact, many parts of the film were totally made up.  While this wasn’t a documentary, but rather a scripted, feature film where director and main star Ben Affleck has taken great artistic license, Argo gave me a lot to think about when dealing with fact and fiction in filmmaking.

Spoiler Alert: I will be discussing how the film ends

1. The Real Tony Mendez, His Latino Heritage and His Marriage

Being that I spend a lot time reporting on race relations, the first most obvious issue with this film is that white Irish Ben Affleck played CIA agent Tony Mendez, who is Latino.  Of course, this always brings up the conversation of why a qualified Latino actor didn’t get this pivotal acting role.  Some of the arguments I heard in favor of Affleck ranged from Mendez’ race doesn’t play a major role in the film, to Affleck has the same fair-skinned complexion as Mendez, to just simply it’s Affleck’s film and he can do what he wants with it, including starring as Mendez.  Also in the movie version, Mendez is portrayed as a man recently separated from his wife with whom he has one child with.  In fact, Mendez never indicated that he had a troubled marriage with his wife, who succumbed to cancer in 1986.  In fact, his wife drove Mendez to the airport for his trip to Iran.  The real Mendez also had two sons and a daughter with his late wife.  When Mendez was asked recently by Fareed Zakaria on his CNN show about Affleck playing him in Argo, he said the following: “Well as I always say, Ben is a nice guy. He’s probably not as good-looking enough to play me, but we’ll give a pass. He’s a damn good director, so I was proud to have him on the big screen looking at somebody and say my name is Tony Mendez. That was quite a moment.”

2. Uh-oh, Canada

In the film Ken Taylor, the Canadian Ambassador to Iran during the hostage crisis, is given a lot of credit for allowing the six Americans to hide out in his home, despite growing suspicion from his Iranian maid.  However, Taylor might not like Affleck’s film because it is believed that Taylor played a bigger role in the now famous “Canadian Caper.”  According to the book Our Man in Tehran, Taylor was a spy during the whole hostage crisis at the request of then President Jimmy Carter and the approval of the then Canadian Prime Minister Joe Clark.  The six Americans stayed in the home basement of Canadian embassy employee, John Sheardown, who wasn’t featured in the film.  Apparently, the Canadians did a lot of things for the Americans, including “providing them with food, shelter, clothes, real passports sent by our government, documents, maps and Scrabble.  The Canadians scouted the airport, sent people in and out of Iran to establish random patterns and get copies of entry and exit visas, bought three sets of airline tickets, even coached the six in sounding Canadian.” In Argo, Mendez is shown doing all the above instead.  At the end of the film, the CIA lets Canada take the full credit out of fear of retaliation for the other American hostages still in Iran.  Also, Taylor is played by Canadian actor Victor Garber, who looks at lot older in the film than what the real Taylor looked like in 1979. When asked about his thoughts on the film, Taylor said “that we’re [Canadians] portrayed as innkeepers who are waiting to be saved by the CIA.”

3. Hollywood’s Role

Who would have thought Hollywood could play such an important role in American diplomacy?  Yes, Mendez did head out to L.A. to set up a fake production company, but there was no such script called Argo.   While the CIA account says otherwise, according to a piece in Slate, Mendez didn’t sift through a pile of other scripts with makeup artist John Chambers (played in the film by John Goodman) and a snarky producer played by Alan Arkin (a person who didn’t exist in real story) before finding Argo.  Chambers gave Mendez a real script upon their first meeting called Lord of Light, which was based on a best-selling science fiction book.   Mendez changed the name of that film script to Argo just to be funny.  In the film Mendez drew the storyboards, whereas in real life the storyboards were drawn by comic book artist Jack Kirby.  While Alan Arkin’s character is fictionalized, Robert Sidell, famed makeup artist for E.T. and other films, was actually the other real person involved in “making Argo.”  In the original Hollywood Reporter article announcing this film, the headline said “Two make-up artists turn to producing with sci-fi ‘Argo.’ ”

4. Escape from Tehran

The ending was the best part of the movie when Mendez and the six Americans make it through the airport disguised as a movie production team.  Everything that could possibly go wrong, went wrong or almost wrong.  After the CIA cancels the scheme in the film, Mendez has an epiphany overnight and decides to go ahead with the mission anyway.  Mendez tells his CIA boss this and the US government goes through the motions to give clearance for the airline tickets at the very last minute and to contact the now shutdown production company out in L.A.  Meanwhile back at the airport, the travelers get their tickets.  However, the customs agent couldn’t find the white visa sheets for the American travelers, but lets them through anyway.  Then the Iranian security guards question their passports and travel arrangements at the gate.  When one of the security guards calls the Hollywood production company to verify the travelers, John Chambers just so happens to answer the phone at the very last minute.  The Americans finally get on the plane and as it is taking off, the security guards realize they were duped, thanks in part to shredded documents repaired by carpet weavers.   The film ends with the Iranian police and army chasing the Swissair plane the Americans are traveling on, but the plane takes off before they could catch them.  Champagne bottles are popping as soon as the plane is out of Iranian airspace.  Mendez gets an award from the US government, and reconciles with his wife.  Happy ending and fade to black…  The only problem with this whole ending is that it didn’t happen in real life.  In fact, according to the real Mendez, getting through the airport and onto the plane was “smooth as silk.”

So clearly Affleck was taking a lot of artistic license with the film.  However, would the film have been less interesting without the over the top dramatics and suspense? Probably.  If the ending used the real events as they happened, the film’s overall impact probably would have been less thrilling (and not to mention less money at the box office and lower Oscar-winning chances).  The film’s parody of Hollywood was probably a real reflection of how Hollywood really operates.  Maybe one day someone will make a proper documentary that will truly tell the story in earnest.  Argo is not the first or the last film to take historical events out of context, but it makes me question the ethics of balancing fact and fiction in a film.  The reality here is that most people will see this film and take everything as fact when that is simply not true.  I saw this comment left on a website reviewing this film, which sums up how I will go forward with my own future filmmaking.

“One can be entertained and prompted to seek the truth all at the same time.”

The Global State of Broadband

The Broadband Commission for Digital Development released a new report – The State of Broadband 2012: Achieving Digital Inclusion – just prior to this year’s United Nations General Assembly in New York.  It is their first ever country-by-country analysis of broadband deployment worldwide.  I had a chance to talk with Dr. Hamadoun Touré, Secretary-General of the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) and Hans Vestberg, CEO of Ericsson at the Social Good Summit following a panel they were on about the future of broadband and digital equality.

The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and ITU formed the Broadband Commission in 2010 to look at ways to improve connectivity.  The Commission wants to achieve global digital inclusion by 2015.

“There are over six million mobile subscriptions worldwide and three quarters of those are in the developing world,” Vestberg said.  “There are one million broadband subscriptions right now.  By 2017 this will grow to five billion.”

The report shows that there are 119 countries that have some kind of national broadband policy in place.  However, more needs to be done by all countries.  The reports says that governments should “promote digital culture and economic activities that are creating new jobs” and encourage the development of more online universities and better infrastructure to support tech innovation.

“The question here is whether broadband is a luxury or a basic human right,” said Touré.  “I believe it is a basic human right.”

The report stresses the impact technology has on achieving the Millenium Development Goals (MDGs).  It cites World Bank statistics, suggesting that a 10 percent increase in broadband penetration could boost GDP by 1.38 percent in low- and middle-income countries.  Better broadband deployment can also expedite improved health care, education, gender equality and sustainability.

Most people use their mobiles for voice calls, but many don’t have access to data. High-speed 3G and 4G technologies are growing in use, but the report says better investment is needed quickly in developing smart technologies to increase data access.  Currently, nearly 15 percent of users in the world have smartphones, and more than half of them in the United States. The reports suggests that carriers need to offer customers the best quality and affordable prices on multiple devices.

Touré said that private sector ideas can play a role in development, which is generally a role associated with governments and non-profits, and practice “the rule of business” by reinvesting in the countries they are helping.

“For 50 years of independence in Africa, our development agenda was based on three words – health, assistance and charity, and it did not work,” he said.  “If you try something for 50 years and it doesn’t work, for God’s sake, you try something else.  There’s nothing wrong with making profits.”

The report shows that ICT contributes to seven percent of Africa’s GDP, which is higher than the world average.  This is possibly because mobiles offers access to services and products that are generally available in their original form in Western nations, like newspapers and banking.  So, of course, the social and economic value of a mobile is higher in Africa that anywhere else.

Touré mentioned that he organized the Connect Africa Summit five years ago in Rwanda to discuss how to improve Africa’s telecommunications infrastructure.  The many African heads of state, NGO leaders and private industry executives pledged about US$50 billion.

“In the first two years, they invested $27 billion,” he said.  “By the end of the five-year time period, they’ll invest over $75 billion in the infrastructure in Africa.  We analyzed problems at the regional level and focused on them to find some solution that we have in larger economics of scale.”

However, the report makes it clear that there isn’t a “one size fits all” method to closing the broadband gap and it recommends a cost-benefit approach to broadband deployment in individual countries.

To read the full report, click here.

Mic Check with Forest Whitaker

I had a chance to talk with Academy Award-winning actor Forest Whitaker at the 2012 Social Good Summit during a media roundtable in New York. Whitaker is a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador for Peace and Reconciliation and recently founded PeaceEarth, a humanitarian organization that promotes peace and development through the use of social media and multimedia storytelling. He talks about the power of technology, conflict minerals and social good.