The movie draws out the tension between Mathews, played by Hoult, and Aryan Nations leader Richard Butler, who insists on working within the system to gain power by getting politicians elected. Mathews grows impatient with Butler’s talk and no action. So, Mathews takes action. His new followers help him rob a Washington Mutual bank branch at gunpoint in Spokane.
Meanwhile Law’s character, hardboiled FBI agent Terry Husk, arrives in Coeur d’Alene, tasked with reopening a field office by himself. He enlists the help of the Kootenai County Sheriff’s Office and befriends a young deputy, played by Tye Sheridan.
“In my experience, hate groups don’t rob banks,” Husk says.
“Maybe this time is different,” the deputy replies.
The screenplay is based on “The Silent Brotherhood: Inside America’s Racist Underground,” a 1989 nonfiction book by Denver journalists Kevin Flynn and Gerhardt. The co-authors covered the case for The Rocky Mountain News beginning with The Order’s assassination of Alan Berg, a provocative Denver radio talk show host who was Jewish.
Comedian-podcaster Marc Maron plays Berg in the film.
It’s not the first movie adaptation of the story.
The 1988 film “Betrayed,” starring Tom Berenger, is a highly fictionalized version set in the Midwest. That same year, Oliver Stone’s “Talk Radio” focused on a character inspired by Berg and his assassination.