We started out from government released 'news' features, showing off a particular portion of Iran's war preparations and 'arsenal'. You fail to point out any similar phenomena from e.g. the US government, USSR/RF government etc. You are confounding the issue by bringing in the entertainment industry.Which is just that, entertainment.
Newest footages of Iran's underground missile bases
What commercial entertainment features showed the US's ICBM arsenal and actual drill during the cold war? Because that is the comparable situation.
Argo is from 2012. And has nothing to do with showing off the US arsenal by the US government
Argo (2012 film) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Day After is a TV movie (not a cinema flick) from 1983, the height of the cold war, and is an anti-war/nuclear story. The story follows several citizens and people they encounter after a nuclear attack (a counterstrike on the US). The film's narrative is structured as a before-during-after scenario: the first segment introduces the various characters and their stories, the second shows the nuclear disaster itself, and the third details the effects of the fallout on the characters.
The Day After was the idea of ABC Motion Picture Division president Brandon Stoddard, who, after watching
The China Syndrome (a 1979 American thriller film that tells the story of a television reporter and her cameraman who discover safety coverups at a nuclear power plant, was so impressed that he envisioned creating a film exploring the effects of nuclear war on the United States. Samuels created the title
The Day After to emphasize that the story was not about a nuclear war itself, but the aftermath.
The Day After - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In particular read this, where is discusses director Meyer
The DYou saiday After - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Count Down ?
This one?
Countdown (2011 film) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia > irrelevant
Or this one?
Countdown (2012) - IMDb > equally irrelevant
Or did you mean The Final Countdown, a 1980
alternate history science fiction film about a modern aircraft carrier that travels through time to a day before the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor? There is nothing shown there, that's wasn't already know or could be known for decades by anyone who picked up a book or journal on the US Navy.
None of this has anything to do with what this thread started out with.
Newest footages of Iran's underground missile bases
Silent reader are just that, silent readers. Don't pretend to know there are any, or their number, because you have no way of knowing. And therefor, you can't pretend to speak for them.