Let's give Franco this: he gives himself room to develop this vicious social tug-of-war. It's possible the Venice jury's heads were turned by the scope of this uprising. Franco fills entire city centres with bruised, battered or otherwise lifeless bodies, cheekily knocking the O off a flagship Louis Vuitton store in passing; and, having indulged his rebellious instincts, he stages a grim clampdown as the state reasserts itself. There's a lot of murderous movement and a rapidly accelerating bodycount, and yet at no point does Franco address ordeal cinema's chief liability: characters that are indistinguishable from crash test dummies, whom the filmmaker doesn't care about, and who exist solely so as to be bashed around at regular intervals. When a heavily pregnant guest shows up at the reception, you can bet Franco is going to have some diabolical fun with her down the line - and sure enough he does once the revolutionaries discover her cowering in the pantry. But then so would the Manson family, and I wouldn't really want to witness their handiwork, either. This heavyhandedness ensures New Order comes in way down on last year's sly MUBI import The Good Girls, another Mexican depiction of societal collapse, albeit one that had stealth on its side, and which troubled to ensure its characters weren't just straw men. Franco, by contrast, doesn't care about the rich, because they have fancy houses and treat those beneath them with disdain; he scoffs at the revolutionaries, because they go too far and generate the chaos a control-freak creative can only find distasteful; and he's not an especially big fan of the police, either, depicted here as fascists with guns. Which doesn't leave us with much to cling to amid the descent: it's just endless killshots and screams, corpses being torched in neat lines, and ironic use of a military anthem over the closing credits. Franco returned to Venice this year with his latest Sundown, only to be sent home with a near-universal set of one-star reviews. This is the downside of having the blessing and privilege of making a film a year for international exhibition: one-trick ponies get sussed out quicker than ever.
New Order is now streaming via MUBI.
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