Hostages movie review & film summary (2022)

Publish date: 2024-01-21

The first episode of “Hostages,” which counts among its directors the great Sam Pollard (“Mr. Soul!”), arguably moves too quickly through the historical events that led up that fateful day in 1979. The truth is that years of covert operations and political gamesmanship between the U.S. and Iran led to what happened at the end of the Carter administration in Tehran. It was an intertwined dynamic between world powers that was forever shattered when the U.S.-backed Shah was overthrown and given sanctuary in the U.S., where he was to receive cancer treatment. Ayatollah Khomeini became such a powerful voice in Iran that his supporters took action against the U.S. Embassy to demand the Shah's return. It would forever shape not just Iran/U.S. relations but how future politicians would deal with hostage crises and how world leaders viewed both countries. And it likely cost Carter the 1980 election, which would change everything around the world by making Reagan the face of American politics.

All of the big picture stuff is very interesting, and very well-assembled here, but the most moving and striking material comes from the people who were in that embassy for over a year, on both sides of the gun. “Hostages” gets heartfelt stories from captives who thought they were going to die and hostage takers who explain their intentions and beliefs at the time. The producers also wisely pepper in experts on all sides, including Iranian officials and even Carter campaign workers who explain how the crisis impacted the Presidential election. 

Ultimately, “Hostages” makes clear how much Carter underestimated the “televised” aspect of that early quote. He didn’t want the hostages to impact his campaign, realizing that it was the Ayatollah’s way to punish the administration, but he couldn’t avoid it. “If this little bastard Carter can’t handle the Ayatollah, I’ll take my chance with the cowboy,” says one strategist, quoting what he was hearing from voters in 1980. A hostage even speaks of seeing a magazine cover in the Embassy announcing Reagan’s win and presuming it was Russian propaganda. That’s how much life changed in the 444 days that these people were in captivity, wondering if each day would be their last. Since then, world leaders have felt more keenly aware of how perception can ripple around the world, spending more and more time and money to control the optics that Carter didn’t see coming as much as Reagan and Khomeini clearly did.

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