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[Fantasia ’14 Review] All Hail ‘The Man in the Orange Jacket’!

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Transforming the mundane and the familiar into something terrifying is something only skillful filmmakers can pull off well enough that they leave a mark. David Lynch can do it probably better than anyone. Lars Von Trier is also adept at it. Both totally different filmmakers, both highly skilled at making the ordinary scary as hell.

Now add to that list Armenian writer/director Aik Karapetian, whose film The Man in the Orange Jacket had its world premiere at Fantasia Fest. On the surface it’s a simple tale of violent justice in the slasher vein, but it quickly evolves into a haunting nightmare of paranoia and domestic terror. It’s like High Tension sifted through Lars Von Trier’s filter. If that comparison doesn’t have you excited, might want to check that pulse. Also, it’s apparently the first horror film from Latvia! Welcome to the party, Latvia!

A wealthy industrialist has sold one of his harbors, leaving over 200 people without a job. He couldn’t be reached for comment, since he’s on vacation at one of his remote, towering mansions. It’s the type of place two people could live in and never see each other for weeks. A real upper class prick, this guy. Enter the titular man in the titular orange jacket – one of the prick’s former workers out for his piece of the pie. In savage fashion, the man slaughters his boss (not a spoiler, trust me) and shacks up in the mansion for a little R&R.

Making himself comfortable in the lap of luxury, the man drapes himself in expensive robes and lavish meals that he drives to in cars that cost more than the prick probably paid him in 10 years. His personal lifestyles of the rich and famous doesn’t last long however. The man begins to hear faraway sounds in the massive house. A stranger shows up wishing to do business. Then there’s that other guy, the one off in the distance, observing the man. And what does that portrait of Louis XVI keep staring at?

With almost zero dialogue (much like the bulk of High Tension), The Man in the Orange Jacket delivers some of the most chilling and brutal moments of terror you’ll see in 2014. As it tears down the economic divide, the film submerges viewers into a world of violence, the absurd, and an atmosphere so impossibly thick with dread, you may need to walk around the block a bit afterwards to relieve the tension. It’s the sort of horror that truly gets under the skin and sets up camp there, having its way with your private bits.

Although I compared it to High Tension and Von Trier, Karapetian’s film feels like nothing you’ve seen before. The reference points are there, but the images embed themselves in your eyeballs in a wholly unique fashion. The cinematography is stunning at times, particularly during exterior shots in the woods surrounding the mansion. Remember those gorgeous shots in Antichrist that looked like paintings? Some of the shots in The Man in the Orange Jacket resemble those beauties. Inside the house as well the camera passes through rooms and doorways in an attractive, yet creepy manner. – elevating the sense of dread dripping from every frame.

This film marks the arrival of an innovative filmmaker who understands how to take influences and turn them into something fresh. In a genre over-populated with biters, wannabes, and relentless use of jump-scares, we should celebrate a film like The Man in the Orange Jacket for its provocative approach to, well, just about everything it does on screen. Whenever the hell it’s released, this is going to be one of the must-see international breakthroughs of the year.

Patrick writes stuff about stuff for Bloody and Collider. His fiction has appeared in ThugLit, Shotgun Honey, Flash Fiction Magazine, and your mother's will. He'll have a ginger ale, thanks.

Indie

“Bite Size Short: Her House of Horrors” Announce Short Grant Program!

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Her House of Horrors, the horror division of Independent Production House WOMXNOGRAPHY, has launched its Bite Size Short Grant Program, ahead of its film festival Dollhouse of Horror, which will take place in March 2025 in Los Angeles, CA.

The Bite Size Short Grant Program awards $2,000 film grants to female-identifying and queer horror filmmakers. Shorts must be able to be made for $2,000, with a minimum runtime of 8 minutes. Submissions are now open on Filmfreeway, and are being judged by a panel of horror lovers and content creators.

The 2024 Bite Size Short Grant Program judge lineup is as follows:

“James H. Carter II- A documentary director, film producer, podcaster, marketing specialist, and writer. James is the founder and co-owner of Creepy Kingdom. Creepy Kingdom was founded in 2011 and is a multimedia website, and production studio specializing in creepy content. Their primary focus lies at the intersection of childlike fantasy and the macabre, covering horror films, theme parks, haunts, and much more. Beyond their extensive media coverage, Creepy Kingdom hosts events, offers original merchandise, and engages in film production under the Creepy Kingdom Studios brand producing original films like “Foolish Mortals”, exploring Disney’s “Haunted Mansion” fan culture, and “Georgie”, featuring Tony Dakota from the original “It” miniseries.

“In addition to founding Creepy Kingdom, James has won awards for his documentary work, including the award-winning “Foolish Mortals,” which has earned him recognition. He has been featured on Freeform’s 31 Nights of Halloween special.

“Ashleeta Beauchamp is the editor-in-chief of Peek-A-Boo! Magazine, a cheeky horror magazine created to uplift marginalized writers, artists, models and other creators within the horror community. She also runs The Halloween Coalition, a community group to provide support and marketing for horror and Halloween events around the Southern California area.

“Titeanya Rodríguez is a multi-hyphenate creative, and the founder and owner of HER HOUSE OF HORRORS, home of DOLLHOUSE OF HORROR and the horror division of WOMXNOGRAPHY. As a fellow storyteller and a self-proclaimed artivist, Titeanya’s mission is to create opportunities for women of color and queer women, across film, tv, sports, music, and beyond. She is also the creator of the BITE SIZE SHORT grant program.”

Winners will have a one-night theatrical screening at Regal Cinemas. Submissions Close April 8 at Midnight. Winners will be announced on May 27, 2024. Shorts must be shot and through post-production by June 30, 2024. The screening will take place on July 8, 2024, in Los Angeles, CA.

WOMXNOGRAPHY, HER HOUSE OF HORRORS, and Rodriguez are represented by Azhar PR, Granderson Des Rochers, and Kinsella Holley Iser Kump Steinsapir.

To submit your short to the Bite Size Short Grant Program, go to the FilmFreeway link here.

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