Affleck delivers yet again

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This film image, released by Warner Bros. Pictures, shows Bryan Cranston (left) as Jack O’Donnell and Ben Affleck as Tony Mendez in “Argo,” a rescue thriller about the 1979 Iranian hostage crisis. (AP)
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Ben Affleck is closing in on the perfect thriller. “Argo” shows us how near the mark he has gotten in just three films.

Since stepping behind the camera to direct, Affleck has yet to make a movie that doesn’t pull us to the edge of our seats.

He may have showed his easy way with suspense and pathos, chases and humor with “Gone Baby Gone” and “The Town.” But “Argo” has him operating on a whole new level.

This deft blend of mortal terror, personal and national humiliations and Hollywood chutzpah is one of the best pictures of the year.

“Argo” is based on a true story that took place during the Iranian hostage crisis of 1979-80. Six Americans slipped through Iranian clutches and hid out in the Canadian ambassador’s residence. The U.S. State Department wanted to disguise them and have them ride out of the country on bicycles. But one CIA agent had a better idea. Give em sunglasses, call them movie people and pass them off as Hollywood types on a “location scout” for a “Star Wars” rip-off, a sci-fi picture set in the desert.

It is “the best bad idea” the higher-ups (Philip Baker Hall, Bob Gunton) have in front of them. So Tony Mendez (Affleck) gets the green light for a caper so wacky it can only have been inspired by his son watching “Battle for the Planet of the Apes.” They need to pull this off quickly. The Iranians are closing in on the folks hiding out. They need this production to look legit. They need “real” Hollywood folks, “names.” Oscar-winning makeup artist John Chambers (John Goodman, perfect) is an old CIA contact. And he drags in producer Lester Siegel, played with his usual profane relish by the great Alan Arkin.

Affleck and screenwriter Chris Terrio could have easily turned this far-fetched tale into a farce. And the Hollywood scenes are exactly that – cynical, silly, downright giddy. Period-perfect rock songs litter the soundtrack, Rolls Royces dot the Hollywood hills and no Hollywood cliche – bluffing down an agent’s asking price for a bad script titled “Argo” – is too corny to revive.

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