Ben Affleck's Argo – about the rescue of six U.S. diplomats during the 1979 Iranian Hostage Crisis through a clever ruse – is shaping up to be one of the fall season's first studio awards hopefuls, The Hollywood Reporter said.
Warner Bros. is so keen on the film after strong test screenings that it is moving Argo's release from September 14 to October 12, positioning it closer to the heart of awards season.
Argo, which Affleck directed and stars in, now occupies the date held by another high-profile Warners title – The Gangster Squad. Warners has moved Gangster Squad off of that weekend and will release the pic between September and December (it could get Argo's original Sept. 14 date).
Directed by Ruben Fleischer, Gangster Squad also has awards potential, though it is more commerical in scope. Both it and Argo could easily show up at the Toronto International Film Festival in September, a popular launching pad for awards titles and movies opening soon after the festival.
Gangster Squad traces the Los Angeles Police Department's battle to keep East Coast gangsters out of the city in the 1940s and '50s.
Produced by Affleck, George Clooney and Grant Heslov, Argo is Affleck's follow-up to The Town and Gone Baby Gone, which likewise opened in the fall. Argo also stars Bryan Cranston, Clea DuVall, John Goodman and Kyle Chandler.
Argo details how the Canadian and U.S. governments teamed to rescue six diplomats at their embassy in Tehran by convincing the Iranian government that the group of six were only in the country to scout for a film. Chris Terrior wrote the script based on a 2007 article in Wired.