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28th December 2025
12:30pm GMT

A common complaint you hear from people about movies is that all there is in cinemas is just blockbusters and sequels.
While this isn't quite true - the release and box office success of films like Bring Her Back, Companion, Friendship, Good Boy, The Long Walk, Materialists, Nosferatu and Weapons - can attest to this, clearly there is a problem either with theatregoers or distributors in terms of getting certain movies in front of eyeballs.
An example of this is The Order, a very gripping, exciting, timely and mainstream action crime thriller that should have made a splash in cinemas when it was released, but did not.
Was this because it was released in Ireland and the UK immediately after Christmas Day 2024 and was pulled from cinemas after a week or so? Or was it pulled from theatres because not enough people knew about the movie or went to see it? Whatever the reason, it's a real shame.
Thankfully, though - based on data from JustWatch - the film found an audience on Prime Video, where it is currently available to stream.
Directed by Justin Kurzel (fresh off the back of his critically acclaimed movies True History of the Kelly Gang and Nitram), The Order is set in the '80s.
It revolves around veteran FBI agent Terry Husk (Jude Law, Black Rabbit), who, seeking an easier caseload after a string of intense investigations, moves to Idaho.
His peace is shattered, however, when a young Idaho cop named Jamie Bowen (Tye Sheridan, Ready Player One) alerts him of his suspicion that a local missing person's case and a series of robberies and bombings are all linked.
As it turns out, these crimes are being organised by Bob Matthews (Nicholas Hoult, Superman), the leader of a neo-Nazi terrorist organisation, who is planning to use the money from the group's heists to finance an armed uprising against the US government.
Based on true events, The Order is the type of movie they don't make enough of anymore, an adult-focused crime thriller with a sociological edge.
Kurzel's muscular direction and the cat-and-mouse game that develops between Law's frazzled agent and Hoult's cold-as-ice thief and killer recalls Michael Mann's Heat.
But there are also shades of The French Connection, In the Heat of the Night and Mississippi Burning in the way the film's investigation plot evolves into a portrait of the dark underbelly of society that is often ignored.
This is before a haunting final title card ties the events of the movie directly to the present day.
The Order boasts two brilliant central performances from Hoult and Law.
The former - who, between this, Juror No. 2, Nosferatu and Superman recently, has established himself as one of the most versatile actors in his age range - is terrifically terrifying.
Hoult conjures up the charm and confidence necessary to make audiences believe that his character could radicalise people into doing his bidding.
Yet, the actor, just in his wide-open stares and his quiet but intense delivery of dialogue, also manages to imbue Matthews with an incredibly sinister edge.
All the while, Jude Law gives one of his best performances ever.
He plays a man who has already seen too many horrors but feels compelled to continue to investigate Hoult's neo-Nazi, even at a deep cost to himself. This is because he knows it is the right thing to do.
Nailing the perfect mix of world-weariness and righteous anger, just the way Law carries himself tells you more about his FBI agent than the script ever could with words.
Occasionally, the screenplay by Zach Baylin (King Richard) feels like it's skirting over some of the more interesting elements on the fringes of its story - perhaps in an effort to cut down the film's running time.
Female characters played by Alison Oliver (Task), Jurnee Smollett (Smoke) and Odessa Young (The Narrow Road to the Deep North) get short shrift, while Husk's estranged wife is left absent from the movie entirely despite being talked about a lot.
But these criticisms aside, The Order definitely deserves a watch, particularly if you love crime thrillers and you missed it during its cinema release.
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The Order is streaming on Prime Video in Ireland and the UK right now.
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Movies & TV