A wounded deserter escapes the war against machines and allying himself to a female resistance fighter who's determined to strike back at the superior enemy before all is lost.A wounded deserter escapes the war against machines and allying himself to a female resistance fighter who's determined to strike back at the superior enemy before all is lost.A wounded deserter escapes the war against machines and allying himself to a female resistance fighter who's determined to strike back at the superior enemy before all is lost.
- Awards
- 7 wins & 6 nominations total
Featured reviews
I appreciate and support newb filmmakers (of which they aren't entirely new), even more when their film is independently funded, but there's no excuse for such long dragged out nonsense in the lazy writing.
It was just once scene after the other of the exact same nonsense - running, hiding, laser rays, repeat. The normally just-right 94 min runtime felt like almost 3 hours with the long dragged out and mostly unnecessary scenes, and the slow pacing. Aside from this story being told so many times before - all much better, there was just way too much filler and very little substance. Had this been chopped down to a 15 min or so short film, it would've shined, and made the dialogue-less 94 min runtime more bearable. I get that the machines have great hearing, but I doubt it was better than the aliens in "A Quiet Place", so being in a basement with nothing in sight for miles and zero dialogue, is lazy writing imo. Giving the viewer all this filler and expecting them to do all your work to figure out what's going on, in place of dialogue, is writing I'd expect from a 5th grade drama class. Never mind the cringeworthy plot and technical issues. Again, lack of funding is no excuse for lazy and sloppy writing.
What this film did have going for it, was an great score and excellent cinematography. The aerial views were all on point, but the irrelevant sudden shots of flower, bugs on the ground, etc, was just amateur directing and the cherry on top for the wasted whipped cream filler. The "machines" looked decent on the screen for the most part, but those CGI explosions and laser beams were a laughable 1970's quality. Even the editing (was there any?) was horrible. So never mind the current four reviews of 7, 8, 9 and 10/10 (hmm, I see a pattern), this is a very generous 5/10 from me.
It was just once scene after the other of the exact same nonsense - running, hiding, laser rays, repeat. The normally just-right 94 min runtime felt like almost 3 hours with the long dragged out and mostly unnecessary scenes, and the slow pacing. Aside from this story being told so many times before - all much better, there was just way too much filler and very little substance. Had this been chopped down to a 15 min or so short film, it would've shined, and made the dialogue-less 94 min runtime more bearable. I get that the machines have great hearing, but I doubt it was better than the aliens in "A Quiet Place", so being in a basement with nothing in sight for miles and zero dialogue, is lazy writing imo. Giving the viewer all this filler and expecting them to do all your work to figure out what's going on, in place of dialogue, is writing I'd expect from a 5th grade drama class. Never mind the cringeworthy plot and technical issues. Again, lack of funding is no excuse for lazy and sloppy writing.
What this film did have going for it, was an great score and excellent cinematography. The aerial views were all on point, but the irrelevant sudden shots of flower, bugs on the ground, etc, was just amateur directing and the cherry on top for the wasted whipped cream filler. The "machines" looked decent on the screen for the most part, but those CGI explosions and laser beams were a laughable 1970's quality. Even the editing (was there any?) was horrible. So never mind the current four reviews of 7, 8, 9 and 10/10 (hmm, I see a pattern), this is a very generous 5/10 from me.
Seen it at Snowdance Festival in Germany. And never seen a sci fi no budget with this amazing quality in VFX - especially because of the huge amount of VFX shots in the film.
Loved the mood of the film. If you are into indie films I'm sure you will enjoy "A Living Dog" as a very special and unique indie sci fi thriller, even if the very low budget and the very short shooting time cannot be hidden everywhere. But the production value compared to the financial input is near to infinetely.
Loved the mood of the film. If you are into indie films I'm sure you will enjoy "A Living Dog" as a very special and unique indie sci fi thriller, even if the very low budget and the very short shooting time cannot be hidden everywhere. But the production value compared to the financial input is near to infinetely.
Rating Breakdown:
Story - 0.75 :: Direction - 1.50 :: Pace - 1.25 :: Performances - 1.50 :: Entertainment - 1.25 :::: TOTAL - 6.25/10.
Silence has rarely been this terrifying. A New World Order takes the dystopian sci-fi thriller formula and strips it down to something raw, intense, and almost entirely wordless. It's A Quiet Place meets The Terminator, but on an indie budget-and yet, miraculously, it works.
The premise is simple: humanity has fallen. Robots rule. The last survivors must stay silent, because the machines hunt by sound, and speech equals death. This concept is executed brilliantly by writer-director Daniel Raboldt and co-writer Thorsten Franzen, who craft a film where silence isn't just a stylistic choice-it's the entire foundation of survival.
With almost no dialogue, everything rests on the performances of Stefan Ebel (Tomasz) and Siri Nase (Lilja), who must convey emotion, trust, and tension without words. And they deliver. The film's pacing is slow, methodical, but effective-though modern audiences accustomed to action-packed storytelling might find it a little too patient for their liking.
Raboldt's direction is masterful, using framing and visual storytelling to build tension. The world feels empty yet dangerous, and despite the low budget, the film looks fantastic. The special effects are subtle but effective, and the looming presence of the unseen machines keeps the stakes high.
This won't be for everyone. It's quiet. It's slow. But for those who love atmospheric, intelligent sci-fi-films like Moon or Children of Men-this is an absolute must-watch. And the ending? It's the kind that lingers, making the whole experience feel worthwhile.
A bold, brilliant slice of dystopian cinema. Just don't expect any pep talks.
Silence has rarely been this terrifying. A New World Order takes the dystopian sci-fi thriller formula and strips it down to something raw, intense, and almost entirely wordless. It's A Quiet Place meets The Terminator, but on an indie budget-and yet, miraculously, it works.
The premise is simple: humanity has fallen. Robots rule. The last survivors must stay silent, because the machines hunt by sound, and speech equals death. This concept is executed brilliantly by writer-director Daniel Raboldt and co-writer Thorsten Franzen, who craft a film where silence isn't just a stylistic choice-it's the entire foundation of survival.
With almost no dialogue, everything rests on the performances of Stefan Ebel (Tomasz) and Siri Nase (Lilja), who must convey emotion, trust, and tension without words. And they deliver. The film's pacing is slow, methodical, but effective-though modern audiences accustomed to action-packed storytelling might find it a little too patient for their liking.
Raboldt's direction is masterful, using framing and visual storytelling to build tension. The world feels empty yet dangerous, and despite the low budget, the film looks fantastic. The special effects are subtle but effective, and the looming presence of the unseen machines keeps the stakes high.
This won't be for everyone. It's quiet. It's slow. But for those who love atmospheric, intelligent sci-fi-films like Moon or Children of Men-this is an absolute must-watch. And the ending? It's the kind that lingers, making the whole experience feel worthwhile.
A bold, brilliant slice of dystopian cinema. Just don't expect any pep talks.
It's hard to write a review for this movie because it's hard to figure out why A Living Dog works as well as it does. One minor question that I haven't yet sorted out is why it's called "A Living Dog." There is a living dog who makes a very brief appearance in silhouette only but I guess that the movie name has additional meaning. I think one thing that is very interesting is that movie transcends the cliches it references and employs: the "Terminator Machines" and the apocalypse details are referenced with brief "yada yada yada" nods. We are given just enough info to "get the lowdown". So the movie ultimately transcends it's own plot, doesn't get caught up in it's own details. It actually has a kinship in my humble opinion with The Verdict (1982) directed by Sidney Lumet and starring Paul Newman. The male protagonist is a kind of silent Frank Galvin character reciting to himself "There are no other cases, this is the case."
This is storyline badly written, should have never made it to production. I can honestly tell from the very beginning the intro just how bad the sci-fi movie with me. I can see how they try to bring some attention to detail but it was complete failure. The actress / actors was always looking around at nothing and then when something comes it's still nothing.
Did you know
- TriviaBeing huge fans of the 80s TV show "The Tripods" by the BBC, the filmmakers hid the title melody from that show in the waveform of an emergency signal in the film.
- GoofsWhen the man approaches the house in the woods for the first time he walks past a window towards the door and you can see the cameraman dressed in dark clothing reflected in the window.
- SoundtracksTwinkle, Twinkle Little Star
written by Jane Taylor
sung by a voice in the children's doll
- How long is A Living Dog?Powered by Alexa
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- A New World Order
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- Finland(location)
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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