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Film: 'The Man In The Orange Jacket': London Review

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  • Film: 'The Man In The Orange Jacket': London Review

    'THE MAN IN THE ORANGE JACKET': LONDON REVIEW

    Hollywood Reporter
    Oct 29 2014

    10:47 AM PDT 10/29/2014 by Stephen Dalton

    Atmospheric Latvian slasher thriller puts a timely twist on
    psycho-horror conventions for an age of economic austerity

    Billed as the first ever horror movie from Latvia, The Man in
    the Orange Jacket is a stylish, ambitious, politically charged
    psycho-thriller made by the same Riga-based production house as
    the small Baltic state's current Foreign Language Oscar candidate,
    Rocks in My Pocket. The Armenian-born writer-director Aik Karapetian
    never quite delivers on the chilly promise of his opening act, but
    there are sequences here that have the creepy, controlled intensity
    of Michael Haneke or Lars Von Trier.

    After making a positive splash at Telluride, Austin's Fantastic Fest
    and Canada's Fantasia, Karapetian's second feature screened at the
    London Film Festival two weeks ago. Beyond festival circles it should
    appeal to the minority of genre fans who favor highbrow psychological
    mystery over high body counts, with potential for crossover to arthouse
    audiences too.

    Dressed in the high-visibility uniform of his profession, the nameless
    man of the title (Maxim Lazarev) is a dock worker who has just been
    laid off from his job along with 200 colleagues. Emotionless and
    silently determined, he sets off on a trudging country walk to a
    luxurious lakeside mansion belonging to the dock's wealthy owner
    (Aris Rozentals). Following a silent home invasion, the intruder
    slaughters the tycoon and his young wife (Anta Aizupe) with a hammer
    and screwdriver, the tools of manual labor transformed into weapons
    of class war.

    Instead of fleeing the scene of his crime, the killer turns lord of
    the manor and begins savoring the high life, gorging on expensive
    artwork and fancy food. But he soon starts to feel spooked by odd
    noises and sightings around the remote, empty mansion. A mysterious
    figure starts stalking him, also wearing an orange jacket. A visit
    from a pair of lookalike prostitutes descends into a sadistic, sexually
    deranged bloodbath and a brutal cat-and-mouse chase through the snowy
    woods outside. Or so it seems, as there are strong hints that these
    reality-warping scenes are feverish hallucinations.

    The Man in the Orange Jacket draws on some classy cinematic
    antecedents, from Kubrick's The Shining to Von Trier's Antichrist
    via Alexandre Aja's High Tension. It is also assembled with a
    self-consciously arty eye, holding back its elegant opening credits
    until a full 15 minutes of plot have elapsed, and keeping the
    protagonist silent until almost midway through.

    Sadly, Karapetian appears to lose his nerve in the second half, piling
    on nightmarish twists in place of narrative logic, from reanimated
    corpses to amateurishly staged knife attacks. The identity of the
    second orange-jacketed man is also plain from the start, despite
    clumsy attempts to conceal his face. With a compact running time of
    71 minutes, the bloody finale inevitably feels a little rushed and
    lacks the requisite nerve-shredding crescendo that defines the best
    psycho-horror movies.

    More spooky short story than full-blooded feature, The Man in
    the Orange Jacket is a great idea only half realized, failing to
    exploit the latent dramatic potential buried in its timely subtext
    of underclass rage in an age of extreme inequality. That said, this
    is still an intriguing trip into the Twilight Zone from an unsung
    cinematic corner of Europe, marking out Karapetian as a sharp young
    talent with a bright future in dark fairy tales.

    Production company: Locomotive Productions Cast: Maxim Lazarev,
    Anta Aizupe, Aris Rozentals Director: Aik Karapetian Screenwriter:
    Aik Karapetian Producer: Roberts Vinovskis Cinematographers: Janis
    Eglitis, Jurgis Kmins Editor: Andris Grants Make-up: Maija Gundare
    Sales company: Wide Management, Paris No rating, 71 minutes

    http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/man-orange-jacket-london-review-744662



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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