The Order review – sadly prescient true life ’80s cop thriller

Review by Rafa Sales Ross @rafiews

Directed by

Justin Kurzel

Starring

Jude Law Jurnee Smollett Nicholas Hoult

Anticipation.

Australian director Justin Kurzel has been a little up and down of late.

Enjoyment.

A hard-nosed, serious treatment of hard-nosed, serious subject matter.

In Retrospect.

It’s certainly – and perhaps unfortunately – very apropos for these troubled times.

It’s cops versus Nazis in this old school policier from Justin Kurzel, powered by ace lead performances from Jude Law and Nicholas Hoult.

Robert Jay Mathews was the founder of a white supremacist organisation that lends its name to Justin Kurzel’s cop procedural, The Order. In a 1984 letter, Mathews explained his desire to “quit being the hunted and become the hunter.” This notion sits at the heart of the film, a captivating cat and mouse chronicle of the rise of Nazi-inspired ideology in ’80s USA.

A police procedural needs a tormented copper, and Jude Law fills this role as ageing agent Terry Husk. Initially investigating violent robberies, he ends up heading an operation to catch Nicholas Hoult’s Mathews, who plans to kickstart a race war in America. As an entry to this flinty genre, The Order proves a competently realised affair. Kurzel’s longtime collaborator Adam Arkapaw captures the vast American Northwest, with its sinewy roads nestled beside mountains as the only gateways out, with visual elan. Law plays against type as Husk while Hoult embodies the particular charm that allows the cruel to control the gullible.

Tough luck, however, for those expecting another dose of Kurzel’s violent social realism. This is not the Australian outback, and The Order sees the director tamed, manifest in his prioritising of ethical questionings over criminal minutiae. The horror comes from seeing seismic consequences closer to newspaper headlines than history books. Figureheads die, but words live on, with grifters always waiting in the wings, spouting the same hate.

Published 22 Dec 2024

Tags: Jude Law Justin Kuritzkes Nicholas Hoult Venice Film Festival

Anticipation.

Australian director Justin Kurzel has been a little up and down of late.

Enjoyment.

A hard-nosed, serious treatment of hard-nosed, serious subject matter.

In Retrospect.

It’s certainly – and perhaps unfortunately – very apropos for these troubled times.

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