In what church is Heath Ledger a priest? And who are the nuns - Heather Graham and Tara Reid?
The Order (2003)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:56
Fresh:5
Rotten:51
Average Rating:2.9/10
Consensus: A religious thriller that's more lethargic and silly than thrilling.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for violent images, sexuality and language
Runtime: 1 hr 45 mins
Genre: Horror/Suspense
Theatrical Release:Sep 5, 2003 Wide
Box Office: $7,536,577
Synopsis:
For centuries, a secret Order has existed within the Church. Following a series of unexplained murders, a renegade priest (Heath Ledger) begins an investigation that hurls him into a maelstrom of...
For centuries, a secret Order has existed within the Church. Following a series of unexplained murders, a renegade priest (Heath Ledger) begins an investigation that hurls him into a maelstrom of unimaginable evil, murder and the knowledge that there is a fate worse than death.
The priest's search takes him to The Sin Eater – a key figure in this mysterious and ancient Order. The immortal Sin Eater's role is nothing less than playing God on earth by absolving the unforgivable of their sins outside the Church, allowing great evil to go unpunished. Burdened with centuries of evil, The Sin Eater craves the luxury of death. But who will eat his sins and grant eternal peace? Who will carry on his dark tradition and continue the work of the Order? As the young priest uncovers the answers and pursues these paragons of evil, he fights to save his own soul and that of the woman he loves.
Twentieth Century Fox presents a Baumgarten Merims production, THE ORDER. The film is written, produced and directed by Academy Award® winner Brian Helgeland, and produced by Craig Baumgarten. Heath Ledger, Shannyn Sossamon, Mark Addy, Benno Fürmann, and Peter Weller star in the film. -- © 20th Century Fox
Starring: Heath Ledger, Shannyn Sossamon, Mark Addy, Benno Furmann
Starring: Heath Ledger, Shannyn Sossamon, Mark Addy, Benno Furmann, Peter Weller
Director: Brian Helgeland
Director: Brian Helgeland
Screenwriter: Brian Helgeland
Producer: Brian Helgeland, Craig Baumgarten
Composer: David Torn
Studio: 20th Century Fox
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Release:
Sep 1, 2009
DVD Features:
- 2-Disc Set
- Region 1
- NTSC
- Keep Case
- Dual Side
Audio:
- Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
- Subtitles - Spanish - Optional
Additional Release Material:
- Audio Commentary: Brian Helgeland - Director
- Disc 1: THE ORDER - Widescreen
- Widescreen - 1.85
Additional Release Material:
- Trailers: Theatrical Trailer
- Deleted Scenes: With Optional commentary (8)
- Disc 2: THE ORDER - Pan & Scan
Reviews for The Order
As the movie’s promotion intimates, ‘There is a fate worse than death,’ and you got it – it’s sitting through this movie.
There are no surprises here, just a movie that limps along like a wounded horse. At some point, you simply want to put the poor thing out of its misery.
[Helgeland] beats up on the Catholic Church with the same brainless zeal and pointless histrionics as such Grade F noisemakers as Lost Souls and Stigmata.
The film’s failed gothic look is just ugly, so forcibly dank that important details, like which characters are in a certain scene, sometimes get lost.
"The Order" is a halfhearted "supernatural thriller"%u2014interpret as not an actual "horror" movie...
It's a horror movie that isn't frightening and a thriller that isn't thrilling.
A severely muddled, lethargically paced religion-based thriller without any thrills or even vague signs of entertainment value.
...the movie makes little sense even for a guy more than willing to suspend his disbelief, as I was.
From the casting to the plot to the monologues that come off sounding like SNL jokes, everything here is just plain sloppy.
Alternately laughable and sleep-inducing, The Order shows that the team behind A Knight's Tale was not just a one-trick pony. They have plenty more bad movies up their sleeves.
The ABC's of the plot are nearly mystifying, and once you have everything figured out you'll realize that the end result was hardly worth all the effort.
The picture is so lethargic that I began to think of watching it as a form of atonement.
A movie with no place to go, and no idea how to get to where it's not going.
It's preposterous, silly rather than frightening, and the performances and characterizations have a pot-boiler feel.
Give me Aramaic runes and whispered chanting on the soundtrack, and I'm pretty much yours for the evening.
Latest News for The Order
March 16, 2007:
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