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The Strange World of Coffin Joe

Original title: O Estranho Mundo de Zé do Caixão
  • 1968
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
880
YOUR RATING
The Strange World of Coffin Joe (1968)
Horror

Three episodes: A dollmaker whose dolls are eerily human, a tale of necrophilia, and a doctor proves love is dead.Three episodes: A dollmaker whose dolls are eerily human, a tale of necrophilia, and a doctor proves love is dead.Three episodes: A dollmaker whose dolls are eerily human, a tale of necrophilia, and a doctor proves love is dead.

  • Director
    • José Mojica Marins
  • Writers
    • José Mojica Marins
    • Rubens Francisco Lucchetti
  • Stars
    • Luiz Sérgio Person
    • Vany Miller
    • Mário Lima
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    880
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • José Mojica Marins
    • Writers
      • José Mojica Marins
      • Rubens Francisco Lucchetti
    • Stars
      • Luiz Sérgio Person
      • Vany Miller
      • Mário Lima
    • 19User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos28

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    Top cast65

    Edit
    Luiz Sérgio Person
    Luiz Sérgio Person
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    • (as L. S. Person)
    Vany Miller
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    Mário Lima
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    Verônica Krimann
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    Rosalvo Caçador
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    Paula Ramos
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    Tony Cardi
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    Esmeralda Ruchel
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    Messias de Melo
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    Leila de Oliveira
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    Jeff Ribeiro
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    Abigail de Barros
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    Carlos Campos
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    Nelita Aparecida
    • (segment "Ideologia")
    Antônio Ravagnoli
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    • (as Antonio F. Ravagnolli)
    Marlene Alves
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    Ademar Silva
    • (segment "O Fabricante de Bonecas")
    • (as Ademir Silva)
    George Michel Serkeis
    • (segment "Tara")
    • Director
      • José Mojica Marins
    • Writers
      • José Mojica Marins
      • Rubens Francisco Lucchetti
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    6.3880
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    Featured reviews

    8redsun5

    Experimental horror picture: a new terror notion related to a new body limits notion

    I think that in the 60's you can talk about "modern" and "old" kind of horror films.The modernity of horror films was determined by the forces acting in the movie: immanent forces that eluded arcane solutions or mysterious set designing with dark, freakish and irrational characters, were forces related to a new notion of Horror. New Horror tried to find, to create, a new idea of terror closer to the "human body", an immanent and "rational" idea of terror.In this way George A. Romero's movies, with their political suggestions, are the more revolutionary in their genre and, well, i think that Marins' movies too, in their particular, experimental way, follow and reinvent the horror cinema modern notion born in 60's. In the beginning of this amazing picture Ze Do Caixao, presenting his three stories, says: "You cannot understand the terror because you are the terror!".In this statement resides the whole picture: especially the third story, the best one, shows that what scared us are the body's extremes, the "instincts" as Ze says.This argument by Marins\Do Caixao creates a modern notion of horror: filming this Marins checks new extreme forms of the bodies, a new way to be, a way that can be easily confused with sadism or with pure bizarre gory cinematographic entertainment.But Marin's way is really more radical than this kind of simple stuffs.It's an experimental way! Even if all the three stories are led by the same argument - the new notion of terror related by the new new notion of body - only the third one is successful to get the argument in a great complete visual way.Other two stories, especially the first one, are obvious and don't suggest anything new about searching a suitable image for the matter. Anyway, a good, funny too, modern and experimental horror picture. I give 9 to the third story and I give 7 1/2 to the whole picture.
    sinistre1111

    sophisticated and creepy

    Jose Mojica Marins, known as Coffin Joe in the English-speaking world, likely had no model for his style of film; there really was no Brazilian horror scene before him, and little since. This film, a series of three vignettes depicting human depravity, gore and unexpected moments of pathos, is reminiscent of Herschell Gordon Lewis, though a good deal less camp. Some of the cinematography and shot-framing is worthy of Bergman or Polanski ca. REPULSION. Done in crisp B&W, the film also has excellent music (which at times inappropriately overstates itself!), including a theme which celebrates the glory of the man Coffin Joe. This theme, like the rest of the film, may inspire chuckles, but definitely chills as well. Can't wait to see more!
    Infofreak

    "Strange" is an understatement! If you like weird low budget horror movies then you MUST check out Coffin Joe!

    'Strange World Of Coffin Joe' is my third Coffin Joe experience. For those not in the know "Coffin Joe" is the name Brazil's horror icon Jose Mojica Marins is known as in the English speaking world. Separating Marins the man from Coffin Joe the IDEA is extremely difficult, if not impossible. I can't think of any real equivalent of Coffin Joe in America or Britain. It's a bit like if Alfred Hitchcock was also Norman Bates... or something. Oh look, I can't even begin to explain what Coffin Joe is all about! Try watching 'At Midnight I'll Take Your Soul' and its sequel 'Tonight I'll Possess Your Corpse' first. Both are full of creepy low budget weirdness. Even then you might not be prepared for 'Strange World Of Coffin Joe'. For one thing it's an anthology with three separate stories (ala Bava's 'Black Sabbath'). On top of that Marins doesn't act in the first two segments (one about four baddies who invade a mysterious doll makers home to steal his loot and molest his daughters, the other about lyrical tale about obsessive desire and necrophilia told without dialogue), and when he appears in the final story he's not exactly the Coffin Joe we know and love(to hate) from the previous movies. He's no longer a bullying grave digger but a Doctor who is respected enough to get interviewed on a TV show called "The Men Who Make The News". One of the panellists who rejects Joe's philosophy on air accepts his invitation to visit his home, and he and his wife are put through an bizarre series of events to prove Joe's belief that love is dead and instinct conquers morality. Or something like that. Anyone who has seen other Coffin Joe movies knows the kind of stuff he spouts. This segment features some truly extraordinary images involving torture, perversion, cannibalism, and even in one did-I-really-see-that? bit, a terrified girl being taunted with a foot long hoagie. No, I'm not making that up. If you like weird low budget horror movies then you MUST check out Coffin Joe! Imagine the love child of Herschell Gordon Lewis and Jean Cocteau and you're getting there, but really Jose Mojica Marins is a true original. The more I see by him the more fascinated I am.
    7claudio_carvalho

    Three Great Horror Tales

    "O Estranho Mundo de Zé do Caixão" is a collection of three creepy and bizarre horror tales.

    "O Fabricante de Bonecas" ("The Dollmaker"): In Pirituba, Master Bastos is a respectable doll maker that lives with his four daughters in a remote area manufacturing dolls with impressive eyes. When four criminals break in his house to rob his money and rape his daughters, they learn why the doll's eyes are so realistic.

    "Tara" ("Perversion"): A poor balloon seller has a crush on a young woman and stalks her. On her wedding day, the woman is stabbed in front of the church by another woman and dies. After her funeral, the man breaks in her crypt and spends the night with her to satisfy his obsession.

    "Ideologia" ("Ideology"): After a debate on a TV show with the journalist Alfredo about the nonexistence of love, Professor Oaxiac Odez (José Mojica Marins) invites Alfredo and his wife Wilma to visit him. Professor Odez offers to prove to Alfredo that the instinct prevails over reason, and brings the couple to the dungeon of his house. They witness the results of the sinister experiment of Professor Odez with people that did not believe on his theory and after a period subjected to subhuman conditions, have become monstrous animals. Now Alfredo and Wilma are imprisoned and submitted to starvation and all sort of psychological torture to prove that the love is dead.

    The first tale of violence, with heist and rape, is erotic and gore and has a predictable conclusion. The second tale explores an unusual theme, necrophilia without any dialog. The third one is the sickest tale, with cannibalism, torture, humiliation in an insane experiment of a deranged professor. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "O Estranho Mundo de Zé do Caixão" ("The Strange World of Zé do Caixão")
    7BA_Harrison

    More Marins madness for cult movie fans.

    Coffin Joe, the cult horror character created by Brazilian writer/director José Mojica Marins, hosts a trilogy of macabre tales.

    First up is The Dollmaker, which sees a group of thugs breaking into the house of an elderly doll maker to look for an alleged stash of money. Unable to find any gold, the gang take a different kind of prize, raping the doll-maker's four beautiful daughters. The table are turned on the brutes, however, when the old man pulls a gun on the them, and the girls proceed to pluck out the mens' eyes for use in their new dolls. The plot for this one isn't anything special, with a predictable denouement, but it offers plenty of gratuitous T&A and the gory sight of the thugs' decapitated heads sans eyeballs.

    The second story is Obsession, which seriously ups the weirdness ante. A balloon seller becomes obsessed with a beautiful woman, stalking her from a distance, carrying with him the box of new shoes dropped by woman during a shopping trip. On the woman's wedding day, she is stabbed and killed by a love rival. The balloon seller follows the woman's funeral procession to a crypt, which he breaks into after dark in order to fulfil his desires and return the lost shoes. A strangely lyrical tale told entirely without dialogue, Obsession tends to plod for much of its run-time, but ends in a satisfyingly twisted manner, the balloon seller breaking open the dead woman's coffin and stripping her corpse for a spot of necrophilia.

    The last episode opens with the broadcast of a television debate show in which Professor Oaxiac Odez (Marins) expounds his theory that love doesn't exist. After the show, the professor invites a fellow panel member and his wife to his home, where he proceeds to shock and torture the couple in order to prove his ideology. As with his earlier Coffin Joe films, this one sees Marins' character waffling on incessantly about his lunatic philosophies, but also features plenty of exploitative content, including a man being spoon-fed molten metal, needles being pushed through flesh (for real), a sadistic acid attack, the wife drinking her husband's blood (fresh from the jugular) to quench her thirst, and a couple of gory scenes of cannibalism.

    Probably not the kind of thing to appeal to casual horror fans, but those who dig weird cult world cinema should find this entertaining, especially if, like me, they also particularly enjoy the anthology format. One thing's for sure… Marins' world is very strange indeed.

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    Related interests

    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      A 2023 reissue of this film and others in the Coffin Joe series was released by Arrow Video with artwork by Brazilian artist Butcher Billy.
    • Quotes

      Zé do Caixão (Introduction): You can't accept the terror because you are the terror!

    • Alternate versions
      The DVD version has a 3 minute color introduction, to a running time of 83 minutes.
    • Connections
      Edited from O Estranho Mundo de Zé do Caixão (1968)
    • Soundtracks
      Zé do Caixão
      (musical theme)

      Written by José Mojica Marins

      Played by Titulares do Ritmo, and

      Sung by Edson Lopes

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 25, 1968 (Brazil)
    • Country of origin
      • Brazil
    • Language
      • Portuguese
    • Also known as
      • Странный мир Зе-из-гроба
    • Filming locations
      • Calçados Dima, São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil(buying spree, in the segment "Tara")
    • Production company
      • Ibéria Filmes
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 20m(80 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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