After the events of the previous film, Coffin Joe continues to seek a maiden to give him a son. With the help of servant Bruno, he kidnaps six girls from a village. Which one of them will pa... Read allAfter the events of the previous film, Coffin Joe continues to seek a maiden to give him a son. With the help of servant Bruno, he kidnaps six girls from a village. Which one of them will pass his trials of fear?After the events of the previous film, Coffin Joe continues to seek a maiden to give him a son. With the help of servant Bruno, he kidnaps six girls from a village. Which one of them will pass his trials of fear?
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Nice sequel, but not as good as At midnight I will take your soul
This Night I Will Possess Your Corpse
** 1/2 (out of 4)
Sequel to AT MIDNIGHT I'LL TAKE YOUR SOUL, picks right up where that movie left off. Coffin Joe (Marins) survives his ordeal and is freed from all murder charges due to a lack of evidence. He heads back to a small town to search for a bride to give him a son and kidnaps several women for possible candidates but ends up killing the wrong one as she swears vengeance on his soul. Even though this here is a sequel, it does play out more like a remake as both films are pretty much the same story, although its drawn out more here. The film being drawn out to a whopping 107-minutes is the real downfall because it could have lost a good fifteen or twenty-minutes and the pacing would have been much better. With that said, there's still plenty to enjoy here with Marins once again doing a great job on such a small budget. The budget is obviously bigger than the previous film but I'd say the majority of it was spent on the highlight of the film, which is an amazing sequence where Coffin Joe goes to Hell. This is when the film switches over the color and how they created the look of this secret really had my brain rambling in trying to figure it out. The only way I can explain the colors are if you've ever seen a melted bag of Skittles. The way this sequence comes off is never scary but it's certainly an amazing treat for the eyes as not only do we get the great color but we also get all sorts of strange stabbings, beatings and various other bad deeds being carried out by Satan himself. Marins once again gives a great performance and the supporting cast are decent enough for what they have to do. It's worth noting that the kidnapped women were all very brave considering they had to let spiders and snakes all over them. One woman on the bed was obviously terrified as can be seen with her extremely heavy breathing. The ending packs a nice little punch as well as the music score. Fans of the first film will certainly want to check this one out and while it's not as good as the first, it does have enough going for it to make it worth viewing.
Quality psychotronic madness from José Mojica Marins
In my view this sequel is better than the original. There are several reasons for this. For one thing José Mojica Marins has developed as a film-maker. He seems to have a – slightly – higher budget and this is used to expand things a little with better set-pieces and a great scene where Coffin Joe descends into Hell. This sequence breaks the black and white presentation and is shown in psychedelic colours. Marins depiction of Hell is highly imaginative and surreal with much grotesquery and sadism. Additionally, the movie does seem to be paced better than the first instalment despite being twenty odd minutes longer. It's also a fair bit gorier and sleazier as well. Coffin Joe dispatches with several of his enemies in a bloody manner by axe, boulder and shoe-applied razors! He also treats a gaggle of women very badly indeed with extended scenes involving lots of big spiders crawling all over then and then a group of angry looking snakes fulfilling a similar end.
It's a wild concoction for sure. It may well be a very low budget film but Marins makes the most of what he's got. And he does, after all, remain the only true Brazilian horror director, so on that basis alone his work is fascinating in itself. Perhaps as a reaction to his country's religious beliefs Coffin Joe constantly rails against theocracy and is a committed atheist. This, alongside his unexpected love of children, is a most bizarre trait for a horror villain and provides an original subtext to proceedings. At Midnight I'll Possess Your Corpse is certainly a film for the attention of cult film fanatics that's for sure.
This Night I'll Pluck Your Mono-brow.
Aided by disfigured hunchback Bruno (Jose Lobo), Zé abducts six sexy women, whom he subjects to a horrific trial by spider (this scene is an arachnophobe's nightmare!) to determine their suitability as mates. Only one woman, Marcia (Nadia Freitas), passes the test, but—just a little upset by the fact that the other five women are subsequently killed—she refuses to make love to Zé. He surmises that she is not the superior specimen he believed her to be, but allows her to go free.
Eventually, despite his silly cape, stupid hat, obscenely long fingernails, AND a most magnificent mono-brow, Zé somehow wins the heart of local babe Laura (Tina Wohlers), who is only too willing to have his child. But things don't go smoothly for the twisted loon: he suffers from hellish nightmares after discovering that one of the women he killed was pregnant, goes even more crazy when Laura and his unborn son suddenly pop their clogs, and is captured and beaten by muscle-man Truncador (Antonio Fracari) and his pals, before being pursued by Laura's father and a bloodthirsty mob into a swamp, where he drowns.
Several exploitative scenes of sadism and gory violence, some gratuitous nudity, and an ambitious, surreal, multi-coloured nightmare sequence all go to make This Night I'll Possess Your Corpse marginally more enjoyable than the disappointing first movie, but overall it still proves something of a chore to sit through thanks to the fact that much of its 108 minute running time consists of Zé's interminably dull ranting about the nonexistence of God and his plans to create the perfect child.
The Citizen Kane of strange low budget Brazilian Horror movies!
Did you know
- TriviaListed by Abraccine (Brazilian Association of Film Critics) as one of the 100 best Brazilian films of all time.
- Quotes
Zé do Caixão: Oh, and one last favor. If you pass by heaven, give my regards to the angels. But if you end up in hell, give my adress to the devil.
- ConnectionsEdited into VBS Meets: Coffin Joe (2009)
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- Esta noche poseeré tu cadáver
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- Runtime
- 1h 48m(108 min)
- Color
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- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1







