This Night I'll Possess Your Corpse

Starring:Arlete Brazolin, Geraldo Bueno, José Carvalho (IV), Oswaldo De Souza, Antonio Fracari, Nadia Freitas, Graveto, Laércio Laurelli, Jose Lobo, Carmen Marins, Tania Mendonça, Mina Monte, William Morgan, Paula Ramos, Roque Rodrigues, Esmeralda Ruchel, Nadia Tell, José Vedovato, Tina Wohlers
Studio: Fantoma
Product Type: DVD
Editorial Review:
Description
This sequel to "At Midnight I'll Take Your Soul" is bigger, bolder and more insane than its predecessor. Coffin Joe returns to continue his quest for the perfect bride. Aided by a hunchbacked assistant, he embarks on an even more brutal campaign of terror. For his sins, Joe is dragged headfirst into the underworld. As imagined by writer-director-star Jose Mojica Marins, it's as unique a vision of hell as you'll ever see!
Average customer rating:
- Yes, This Is Indeed A Masterpiece
- A unique, stunning, visionary horror masterpiece
|
Coffin Joe - This Night I'll Possess Your Corpse
Starring: José Mojica Marins
Director: José Mojica Marins
Manufacturer: Fantoma
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
General
| Horror
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Occult
| Things That Go Bump
| Horror
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| Classic Horror & Monsters
| Horror
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| Science Fiction & Fantasy
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Brazil
| By Country
| Art House & International
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Portuguese
| By Original Language
| Art House & International
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| Classics
| By Genre
| Art House & International
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
( C )
| Titles
| Features
| DVD
| Video
Used DVDs
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
| Action & Adventure
| African American Cinema
| Animation
| Anime & Manga
| Art House & International
| Classics
| Comedy
| Cult Movies
| Documentary
| Drama
| Educational
| Fitness & Yoga
| Gay & Lesbian
| Horror
| Kids & Family
| Military & War
| Music Video & Concerts
| Musicals & Performing Arts
| Mystery & Suspense
| Science Fiction & Fantasy
| Special Interests
| Sports
| Television
| Westerns
Brazil
| Latin American Cinema
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Classics
| By Genre
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Horror
| By Genre
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Portuguese
| By Original Language
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
General
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Horror
| By Genre
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Similar Items:
- Coffin Joe - At Midnight I'll Take Your Soul
- Coffin Joe - Awakening of the Beast
- Frightmare
- The Case of the Scorpion's Tail
- Black Pit of Dr. M (aka Misterios de Ultratumba)
ASIN: B0000A2ZSP
Release Date: 2003-07-29 |
Customer Reviews:
Yes, This Is Indeed A Masterpiece.......2006-04-24
Previous reviewer Mr. Jolley pretty much said it all and said it perfectly. Folks, this is not just another obscure horror movie. This may be obscure, but it is truly a significant work of art. I collect horror films and have several hundred in my DVD collection. This has to be one of the most creative and bizarre. Now, if you're dedicated to the Hollywood big-budget type of movie this may not be for you. This is conspicuously small-budget, mostly black and white, subtitled (the speaking is in Spanish), and a little rough around the edges in general.
But, in my opinion that only adds to the charm. This movie is genuinely scary with its depiction of true and dedicated evil. We had to usher my two-year-old daughter to bed the minute this thing started even though she wasn't paying much attention: the vibe is so severe and demented that I didn't want her anywhere near it! I even felt a little guilty watching it! But, it is not a gross blood-and-guts film....it is a film of shocking ideas and provocative images (including many beautiful women, snakes, spiders, graves, creepy lagoons, mortuaries, tortured occupants of hell, etc.).
Bottom-line: if you have interest in horror films and the bizarre, you MUST buy this immediately. I guess artists of comparision would be: Salvador Dali and David Lynch, but those come immediately and vaguely to mind due to their affiliations with surrealism; there are probable better comparisons that escape me right now. I have the entire trilogy (this is the third film), and they are all worth having, but this one is the best of the three. And it completely stands well alone if you want to start here and work your way backwards through the trilogy. Oh, and this is nicely packaged: there is a nifty little comic book which accompanies the disc and adds a nice fluorish to your purchase. The DVD extras include an interview with the director/star who I understand is still alive (forty years later) and is quite a major cult-type figure in Brazil.
In closing, this will blow you away. Seriously trippy and terrifying. And fun as such.
A unique, stunning, visionary horror masterpiece.......2005-05-02
Ze do Caixo (better known - thanks to a mistranslation of his name - as Coffin Joe), returns in this remarkable sequel to At Midnight I'll Take Your Soul. This Night I'll Possess Your Corpse takes up right where the first film left off, then quickly takes the story to even more audacious extremes than before. The result is a truly visionary and shockingly bold masterpiece of psychological horror that easily earns director (and star) Jose Mojica Marins a place in the pantheon of horror's brightest lights. Despite Ze's appearance at the end of the first film, his life is saved and his vision eventually restored. Absolved of his former crimes thanks to insufficient evidence, Ze is soon ready and able to begin searching once more for the woman who will give him a son. Ze's philosophy, as he continually reminds us, is centered upon the immortality of blood. He takes existentialism to its greatest extreme, dismissing the weaklings polluting the surface of the earth with their absurd religious faith and their superstitious belief in spirits, challenging the very idea of either God or devil. All that matters to him is the immortality of blood, and thus he yearns for a son who will grant him that immortality. In this film, he goes even farther in his beliefs, though, characterizing himself as a sort of superman, man in his most superior form, one free to act on instinct alone; his son, he asserts, will save the human race by establishing a race of superior men. All he needs now is to find the superior woman deserving of her role as mother of the perfect man.
The complexity of Ze is communicated wonderfully in this film. One of his first acts after returning to a town where all men fear him is the heroic rescue of a child - proving just how genuine a love he has for children (it's just a pity they grow up and become idiots). Ze is also smarter now. Rather than merely choose a woman for the honor of accepting his seed, he kidnaps six prospects and tests them (it involves lots of really big spiders and isn't really the kind of test you can study for). In a scene of gleeful sadism, he takes the winner to bed while the agonizing final moments of the unfortunate runners-up play out vividly before him and his would-be bride. Alas, though, the woman is weak - amoral, but ultimately undeserving of Ze's gift. Then Laura, the daughter of the well-to-do "Colonel" arrives in town, and in her Ze finds the superior woman he is seeking. In a mesmerizingly perfect scene, they go at it against the backdrop of her brother's funeral. Laura is really something else, actually bolstering Ze's strength and resolve when he discovers he has done the one thing capable of prickling his seemingly non-existent conscience.
Of course, the most famous scene in This Night I'll Possess Your Corpse is its audacious hell sequence. Marin creates one of the most disturbing, surreal, and memorable visions of hell I've ever seen, and its magic is made even more pervasive by the fact that it, unlike the rest of the movie, is shot in color. Marin reportedly used electric shocks to make the writhing pain of the actors appear all the more real. Don't think that the film ends there, however; Ze's sacrilegious mania only culminates after he once more dares challenge both God and devil to prove their existence to him, staking his claim anew for eternal existence and immortality. It all makes for a powerful ending to an outrageously audacious masterpiece (there, I said it again).
We in America didn't know what we were missing until the mid-1990s when Coffin Joe finally made its way to our shores. Filmed in the mid-1960s, Marin's brilliant films still have the power to shock and horrify audiences. Limited budgets did not stop Marin from introducing scenes of effective gore into these films, and the amorality of Ze is so extreme as to surprise even the most jaded of modern-day viewers. Today's directors don't have half the vision or audacity of Jose Mojica Marins, so I would urge anyone who cares even a single bit about horror to get your hands on these Coffin Joe films and revel in their genius and power.
Average customer rating:
- Now this independent cinema
- A unique, stunning, visionary horror masterpiece
- I Mean, Why Did You Buy It?
- Pure Psychotronic Nirvana
|
This Night I'll Possess Your Corpse
Starring: Arlete Brazolin , Geraldo Bueno , José Carvalho (IV) , Oswaldo De Souza , and Antonio Fracari
Manufacturer: Fantoma
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
General
| Horror
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Occult
| Things That Go Bump
| Horror
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| Classic Horror & Monsters
| Horror
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| Science Fiction & Fantasy
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Brazil
| By Country
| Art House & International
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Portuguese
| By Original Language
| Art House & International
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| Classics
| By Genre
| Art House & International
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
DVDs Under $14.99
| Today's Deals in DVD
| Special Features
| DVD
| Video
( T )
| Titles
| Features
| DVD
| Video
Used DVDs
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
| Action & Adventure
| African American Cinema
| Animation
| Anime & Manga
| Art House & International
| Classics
| Comedy
| Cult Movies
| Documentary
| Drama
| Educational
| Fitness & Yoga
| Gay & Lesbian
| Horror
| Kids & Family
| Military & War
| Music Video & Concerts
| Musicals & Performing Arts
| Mystery & Suspense
| Science Fiction & Fantasy
| Special Interests
| Sports
| Television
| Westerns
Brazil
| Latin American Cinema
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Classics
| By Genre
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Horror
| By Genre
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Portuguese
| By Original Language
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
General
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Horror
| By Genre
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Similar Items:
- The Coffin Joe Trilogy
ASIN: B00005ABVK
Release Date: 2001-04-03 |
Description
This sequel to "At Midnight I'll Take Your Soul" is bigger, bolder and more insane than its predecessor. Coffin Joe returns to continue his quest for the perfect bride. Aided by a hunchbacked assistant, he embarks on an even more brutal campaign of terror. For his sins, Joe is dragged headfirst into the underworld. As imagined by writer-director-star Jose Mojica Marins, it's as unique a vision of hell as you'll ever see!
Customer Reviews:
Now this independent cinema.......2007-01-24
When people yammer about indie cinema, they bring up directors who mostly work for studios. Jose Marins, on the other hand, is what true indie film should be. Self-financed, totally out of the mainstream, banned in his own country, his films are genuinely eccentric and an expression of his vision. Considering the constraints of how they're shot, and the amateur nature of his cast, Marins gets some excellent effects and prouduces genuinely disturbing scenes. What other director lets real spiders crawl over his cast? Worth it alone for the color scenes in hell, where people are imprisoned in rocks, have various body parts whipped, and are tormented by traditonal devils with pitchforks. If you've never seen Coffin Joe's films, this one is a good place to strart. Marins is a genuine surrealist horror director, along with other indie icon Jean Rollins. Both make films true to their oddball view of the world.
A unique, stunning, visionary horror masterpiece.......2005-08-26
Ze do Caixo (better known - thanks to a mistranslation of his name - as Coffin Joe), returns in this remarkable sequel to At Midnight I'll Take Your Soul. This Night I'll Possess Your Corpse takes up right where the first film left off, then quickly takes the story to even more audacious extremes than before. The result is a truly visionary and shockingly bold masterpiece of psychological horror that easily earns director (and star) Jose Mojica Marins a place in the pantheon of horror's brightest lights. Despite Ze's appearance at the end of the first film, his life is saved and his vision eventually restored. Absolved of his former crimes thanks to insufficient evidence, Ze is soon ready and able to begin searching once more for the woman who will give him a son. Ze's philosophy, as he continually reminds us, is centered upon the immortality of blood. He takes existentialism to its greatest extreme, dismissing the weaklings polluting the surface of the earth with their absurd religious faith and their superstitious belief in spirits, challenging the very idea of either God or devil. All that matters to him is the immortality of blood, and thus he yearns for a son who will grant him that immortality. In this film, he goes even farther in his beliefs, though, characterizing himself as a sort of superman, man in his most superior form, one free to act on instinct alone; his son, he asserts, will save the human race by establishing a race of superior men. All he needs now is to find the superior woman deserving of her role as mother of the perfect man.
The complexity of Ze is communicated wonderfully in this film. One of his first acts after returning to a town where all men fear him is the heroic rescue of a child - proving just how genuine a love he has for children (it's just a pity they grow up and become idiots). Ze is also smarter now. Rather than merely choose a woman for the honor of accepting his seed, he kidnaps six prospects and tests them (it involves lots of really big spiders and isn't really the kind of test you can study for). In a scene of gleeful sadism, he takes the winner to bed while the agonizing final moments of the unfortunate runners-up play out vividly before him and his would-be bride. Alas, though, the woman is weak - amoral, but ultimately undeserving of Ze's gift. Then Laura, the daughter of the well-to-do "Colonel" arrives in town, and in her Ze finds the superior woman he is seeking. In a mesmerizingly perfect scene, they go at it against the backdrop of her brother's funeral. Laura is really something else, actually bolstering Ze's strength and resolve when he discovers he has done the one thing capable of prickling his seemingly non-existent conscience.
Of course, the most famous scene in This Night I'll Possess Your Corpse is its audacious hell sequence. Marin creates one of the most disturbing, surreal, and memorable visions of hell I've ever seen, and its magic is made even more pervasive by the fact that it, unlike the rest of the movie, is shot in color. Marin reportedly used electric shocks to make the writhing pain of the actors appear all the more real. Don't think that the film ends there, however; Ze's sacrilegious mania only culminates after he once more dares challenge both God and devil to prove their existence to him, staking his claim anew for eternal existence and immortality. It all makes for a powerful ending to an outrageously audacious masterpiece (there, I said it again).
We in America didn't know what we were missing until the mid-1990s when Coffin Joe finally made its way to our shores. Filmed in the mid-1960s, Marin's brilliant films still have the power to shock and horrify audiences. Limited budgets did not stop Marin from introducing scenes of effective gore into these films, and the amorality of Ze is so extreme as to surprise even the most jaded of modern-day viewers. Today's directors don't have half the vision or audacity of Jose Mojica Marins, so I would urge anyone who cares even a single bit about horror to get your hands on these Coffin Joe films and revel in their genius and power.
I Mean, Why Did You Buy It?.......2003-10-31
Look, if you bought a Coffin Joe movie, you had to know what the hell it was all about and you have to like it just for the pure style involved.
Then, add the fact that you own a subtitled horror movie and you can impress the hell out of anybody. Or scare the hell out of anybody, and you have the purchase price refunded right there.
Great slices of film history, legendary until now, as they weren't exactly widely available on VHS, if they ever were on VHS.
I'm gonna say one harsh thing about Coffin Joe movies...probably one is enough to appreciate what's going on. I may buy all three if the prices drop, but not before then.
Pure Psychotronic Nirvana.......2001-04-25
A direct sequel to AT MIDNIGHT I'LL TAKE YOUR SOUL, this one is even crazier. Tons of fun horror iconography, from snakes and spiders to devils and demons. The film jumps from lovely black and white to ghastly color as Coffin Joe is literally dragged off to hell by a tall, skinny, faceless demon clad from head to toe in what seems to be bondage gear. Totally freakish! As with the other two Coffin Joe releases, this one comes with a short interview with the director and a small CJ comic book reproduction. Pure psychotronic nirvana!
DVD:
- Sleeping With the Dead
- Beast From Haunted Cave/The Brain That Wouldn't Die
- Drive In
- Visible Secret
- Ghost Stories (4pc)
- House On Haunted Hill/The Bat
- Bludgeoned
- Dementia 13
- Night of the Living Dead
- Bloodlust
DVD
DVD
DVD
Sour Grapes
Charlie's Angels -- Superbit
Charlie Chaplin - The Great Dictator [1940]
DVD: Ape Man
Mafia!