Argo was a major success at the 85th Academy Awards, winning: Best Adapted Screenplay (Chris Terrio) Best Film Editing (William Goldenberg)
is a critically acclaimed 2012 historical thriller that dramatizes the "Canadian Caper," a high-stakes CIA mission to rescue six American diplomats from Tehran during the 1979 Iran hostage crisis. Directed by and starring Ben Affleck, the film won three Academy Awards, including Best Picture , and is widely praised for its expert blend of nail-biting suspense and dark Hollywood satire.
On 4 November 1979, militants stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, taking 52 Americans hostage. However, six staff members managed to escape and found refuge in the home of Canadian Ambassador Ken Taylor.
Reviewers from sites like Rotten Tomatoes (96% score) and Metacritic (86/100) hailed it as a "tense, exciting, and finely wrought" thriller. Legendary critic Roger Ebert gave it four stars, calling it the best film of the year. Fact vs. Fiction
Realizing the six would eventually be caught and executed, Mendez collaborated with Oscar-winning makeup artist John Chambers (John Goodman) and producer Lester Siegel (Alan Arkin) to create a "paper trail" for the fake movie—including ads in Variety and a formal press launch—to convince Iranian authorities that the group was merely a Canadian film crew. Cast and Key Performances
The film is anchored by a stellar ensemble cast of veteran character actors: as Tony Mendez Bryan Cranston as Jack O'Donnell, Mendez’s CIA supervisor
The film’s central hook is a "so-strange-it-must-be-true" plot: to smuggle the Americans out of Iran, CIA "exfiltration" specialist Tony Mendez (Affleck) poses as a Hollywood producer scouting locations for a fake science fiction epic titled Argo .
For viewers in certain regions, the term often refers to the film's availability on isaiDub , a popular platform for downloading Tamil-dubbed versions of international movies. Movie Overview: The Mission and the Movie