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Jude Law appeared to be frozen in time as he attended the Zurich Film Festival on Friday.
The actor, 51, looked like he had barely aged a day with a youthful complexion as he was interviewed for his new film The Order.
He was dressed to impress in a black shirt and trendy pants. Jude completed his smart outfit with a pair of beige socks and shiny black shoes.
The star oozed confidence as he sat in a leather armchair while discussing his role in the upcoming crime thriller.
Jude Law appeared to be frozen in time as he attended the Zurich Film Festival on Friday, looking much younger than his 51 years
He was dressed to impress in a black shirt and trendy pants. Jude completed his smart outfit with a pair of beige socks and shiny black shoes
Jude in the 1997 move Wilde as Lord Alfred Douglas
Jude, who plays washed-up FBI agent Terry Husk in the film, stars alongside Alison Oliver, Tye Sheridan, Jurnee Smollett and Nicholas Hoult.
His performance as a cop who takes on real-life white supremacist group The Order received a seven-minute standing ovation at a screening on Thursday.
The heartthrob said of his character: “He had a kind of lived-in quality that I enjoyed.
“There was a lot of discussion about facial hair, but every agent I interviewed had a mustache, so it was a given that I had to grow one.”
The Order is based on the 1989 biography The Silent Brotherhood by Kevin Flynn and Gary Gerhardt.
It was written by Zach Baylin and distributed by Prime Video (via Amazon MGM Studios).
Although it is a Prime Video film, Vertical has acquired partial rights to the film and it will receive a limited theatrical release on December 6, 2024.
At The Order’s Venice Film Festival press conference, Jude spoke about the importance of the film at a time when far-right ideologies are on the rise again.
Jude, who plays washed-up FBI agent Terry Husk in the film, co-stars with Alison Oliver, Tye Sheridan, Jurnee Smollett and Nicholas Hoult
Jude looked dapper at the event in Zurich
His performance as a cop who takes on real-life white supremacist group The Order received a seven-minute standing ovation at a screening on Thursday. (depicted in the film)
“Unfortunately, the relevance speaks for itself,” he said. ‘It felt like a piece of work that had to be done now.
‘It’s always interesting to find a piece from the past that has a relevant relationship with the present.’
Director Justin agreed with Law, adding that the film’s parallels to today’s world made it so interesting to make.
It’s always something extraordinary when you come across a piece of writing or an event from the past that has a certain perspective that can have a conversation with contemporary politics.
‘That’s a rare gem. So we felt like a lot was being said about today.”