• Home
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Lists
    • Yearly Top Tens
    • Trailers
Menu

World of Reel

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
Home
BREAKING: Netflix Wins Bidding War to Acquire Warner Bros.
IMG_0988.jpeg
Matt Reeves Defends Paul Dano After Quentin Tarantino Calls Him “The Limpest Dick in the World”
IMG_0984.jpeg
Darren Aronofsky to Direct Gillian Flynn-Penned Erotic Thriller for Sony
Screenshot 2025-12-04 154349.png
‘Men in Black 5’ Eyes Will Smith Return
AFI’s Top 10 Films of 2025: Oscar Blueprint or Major Snubs?
AFI’s Top 10 Films of 2025: Oscar Blueprint or Major Snubs?
Featured
Capture.PNG
Aug 19, 2019
3-Hour ‘Midsommar' Director's Cut Screened in NYC
Aug 19, 2019

This year’s 12th edition of the Scary Movies festival at Film at Lincoln Center premiered Ari Aster’s extended version of “Midsommar” this past Saturday.

Aug 19, 2019

World of Reel

  • Home
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Lists
  • More
    • Yearly Top Tens
    • Trailers

‘New Order' Makes the Case Against Violent Social Movements [Review]

May 19, 2021 Jordan Ruimy
image-asset.png

Mexican director Michel Franco’s “New Order,” a dystopian shocker that resonates in these deeply troubling times, is not just his most grueling movie to date, and that’s already a feat in itself, but also his best and most accomplished work. If you were already not a fan of the guy’s work, then this won’t necessarily convert you, but regardless, it’ll convince you of his technical talents as a director.

This, his sixth feature as writer-director, is as coldly calculated as a Haneke, an assault on our psychological senses, with at least half a dozen moments that will make you jump out of your seat. The civil unrest tackled in the film feels pertinently relevant to today’s world — all this, despite it having been shot many months before the BLM protests/riots currently occurring nationwide. If anything, “New Order” can be seen as a depiction of what could happen if such a movement resulted in a attaining its ultimate goal: power.

Set in a Mexico City where violent protests from the poor, mostly native/indigenous rebels have reached a fever pitch, Franco’s initial gaze is set on a luxurious home, where a wealthy white family is throwing a private wedding ceremony. These festivities are being held within heavily secured and walled confines. Marianne (Naian González Norvind), daughter of a wealthy businessman, has just been married, and despite rabid protests happening just a few miles away, the joyous nature of the event is a clearcut example of the disparity and uncaring nature of the rich towards social justice causes.

Franco isn’t hesitant in telling us that this family is very much ingrained in “old money” and part of the 1%, but they also couldn’t care less about the vehement violence and social issues raging on outside. It’s only when demonstrators show up at the door that these “elites” get the rude wakeup call. Senseless acts of violence follow, and guests are shot and killed, robbed, beaten to a near-pulp. Franco uses sound effects to fill our imagination with images of the horrors happening in the background, he refuses to show the acts of violence, only hinting at them.

As the rich are being killed and/or kidnapped as prisoners all around the city, Marianne, on her way to helping pay for the operation of a former helper’s dying wife, is abducted by the revolutionaries and taken captive in a prison where she is raped and held up for ransom. It’s here that Franco’s vision starts to feel a little shakier — the film’s second half descends into the kind of perverse human depravity that lacks any sort of subtlety.

The resulting effect is a bleak state of the union address by Franco, who sees social unrest and the aims of anti-establishment movements as more than just about positive change or smooth democratic transitions of power. He sees them as Marxist manifestos. Is he implying that capitalism, for all its flaws, is still the best system we have to go by? This kind of message will certainly irk many to no end. The protestors in “New Order” are filled with rage and youthful anarchy but without a contingent plan to manage the nation peacefully. They want the rich purged, abused, and ruined.

SCORE: B

In REVIEWS
← Zack Snyder’s ‘Army of the Dead’ Pummels You to Submission [Review]‘There is No Evil’: Berlin Winner is a Harrowing Portrait of Iranian Capital Punishment [Capsule] →

FOLLOW US!


Trending

Featured
IMG_0351.webp
Josh Safdie’s ‘Marty Supreme’ is One of the Best Films of the Year — Timothée Chalamet Has Never Been Better
IMG_0815.jpeg
Six-Minute Prologue of Christopher Nolan’s ‘The Odyssey’ Coming to Select IMAX 70mm Screenings December 12
IMG_0711.jpeg
James Cameron: Netflix Movies Shouldn’t Be Eligible for Oscars
IMG_0685.jpeg
Brady Corbet Confirms Untitled 4-Hour Western Will Be X-Rated, Shot in 70mm, Filming Next Summer

Critics Polls

Featured
Capture.PNG
Critics Poll: ‘Vertigo’ Named Best Film of the 1950s, Over 120 Participants
B16BAC21-5652-44F6-9E83-A1A5C5DF61D7.jpeg
Critics Poll: Kubrick’s ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ Tops Our 1960s Critics Poll
Capture.PNG
Critics Poll: ‘The Godfather’ Named Best Movie of the 1970s
public.jpeg
Critics Poll: ‘Do the Right Thing' Named Best Movie of the 1980s
World of Reel tagline.PNG
 

Content

Contribute

Hire me

 

Support

Advertise

Donate

 

About

Team

Contact

Privacy Policy

Site designed by Jordan Ruimy © 2025