Mexico City, in the near future: The lavish wedding of a wealthy couple descends into chaos during an unexpected uprising by a group of armed men. What follows is a violent coup d’état and the collapse of law, order, and ultimately, humanity
“New Order” by Michel Franco (“Sundown”) is not only a gripping thriller but also a radically bleak portrait of society that brutally exposes the consequences of social inequality, along with its violent excesses. The story begins with a seemingly harmless wedding celebration of the Mexican upper class, which is abruptly interrupted by protests from the lower class.
From this escalation, Franco develops a nightmarish scenario in which state order and morality disintegrate step by step. The film eschews classic characters with whom the audience can identify and clear-cut perspectives—instead, it confronts the audience with a world in which violence becomes an omnipresent structure.
Formally, Franco relies on a cool, almost clinical mise-en-scène, long takes, and abrupt narrative breaks. The fragmented dramaturgy is deliberately disorienting and reflects a society that has lost all sense of stability. Yet this drastic dystopia is less interested in psychological depth than in structural violence: the characters are often mere cogs in a system marked by class divisions, corruption, and abuse of power... and one that, in many parts of the world, no longer feels so far away.
Mexico City, in the near future: The lavish wedding of a wealthy couple descends into chaos during an unexpected uprising by a group of armed men. What follows is a violent coup d’état and the collapse of law, order, and ultimately, humanity
“New Order” by Michel Franco (“Sundown”) is not only a gripping thriller but also a radically bleak portrait of society that brutally exposes the consequences of social inequality, along with its violent excesses. The story begins with a seemingly harmless wedding celebration of the Mexican upper class, which is abruptly interrupted by protests from the lower class.
From this escalation, Franco develops a nightmarish scenario in which state order and morality disintegrate step by step. The film eschews classic characters with whom the audience can identify and clear-cut perspectives—instead, it confronts the audience with a world in which violence becomes an omnipresent structure.
Formally, Franco relies on a cool, almost clinical mise-en-scène, long takes, and abrupt narrative breaks. The fragmented dramaturgy is deliberately disorienting and reflects a society that has lost all sense of stability. Yet this drastic dystopia is less interested in psychological depth than in structural violence: the characters are often mere cogs in a system marked by class divisions, corruption, and abuse of power... and one that, in many parts of the world, no longer feels so far away.