Affleck wins directors award as Argo hurtles to Oscars

Actor-director is humbled by the honour he received.


Reuters February 04, 2013
Argo has picked up the three top awards from the industry’s guilds. PHOTO: FILE

LOS ANGELES:


Actor-turned-film-maker Ben Affleck won the top honour from his peers at the Directors Guild of America on Saturday for the movie Argo, cementing the Iran hostage drama’s frontrunner status for the Oscars.


The Hollywood directors’ recognition for Affleck, however, is an awkward result for the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, which failed to nominate him for Best Director in what is considered one of the biggest snubs of this year’s Oscars.

Since 1948, there have been only six occasions when the Directors Guild of America (DGA) winner has not gone on to win the Oscar for Best Director.

“I have nothing but respect for the Academy,” Affleck said after collecting his first DGA award. The Hollywood star, a producer of Argo, said he was thrilled the film was nominated for the Oscars’ Best Picture award.

“You are not entitled to win anything,” he said.

Argo has picked up the three top awards from the industry’s guilds, whose members are also often members of the Academy.

Last weekend, the film was the victor at both the Producers Guild and the Screen Actors Guild awards, leaving Steven Spielberg’s Civil War-era epic Lincoln in its wake.

Affleck also won Best Director at the Golden Globes while Argo won Best Drama. The Oscars will be held on February 24.

On Saturday, Affleck bested four directors who had all previously won the top DGA honour and gone on to win the Best Director Oscar.

It has been a particularly tough awards season for Spielberg, nominated by the DGA for the eleventh time with Lincoln and a two-time winner for Schindler’s List in 1994 and Saving Private Ryan in 1999.

“What an incredible year for movies,” said Spielberg. “Maybe I’ve had moments when I wished it wasn’t such an incredible year.”

Affleck also beat out Kathryn Bigelow, nominated for Osama bin Laden-manhunt thriller Zero Dark Thirty, Ang Lee for his 3D adaptation of the bestselling novel Life of Pi, and Tom Hooper, for his screen adaptation of the hit musical Les Miserables.

In Argo, which is based on a real account, Affleck also plays the lead role of a CIA agent entrusted with extracting six Americans from revolutionary Iran after the US embassy is stormed. The agent, with help from Hollywood, creates a fake film and makes the Americans part of the crew. 

Published in The Express Tribune, February 5th, 2013.

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