Hallucinations of a Deranged Mind (1978) Poster

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5/10
Many Points in Common with Freddy Krueger
claudio_carvalho26 June 2011
The psychologist Dr. Hamilton (Jorge Peres) is fascinated by the supernatural and adores his wife Tânia (Magna Miller). Out of the blue, Dr. Hamilton has daydreams and nightmares with Zé do Caixão that wants to take Tânia to deliver his perfect offspring. His colleagues at the Psychiatric Clinic Dr. Adolfo Hansen invite José Mojica Marins, who is the creator of Zé do Caixão, to convince Dr. Hamilton that the character is not real but fruit of his imagination.

"Delírios de um Anormal" is a boring collection of footages from other movies from Zé do Caixão a.k.a. Coffin Joe. However, it is interesting to see that this 1978 film has many points in common with Wes Craven's "Nightmare on Elm Street" (1984) and the idea of an evil supernatural being that attacks in nightmares might have been the source of inspiration for the creation of Freddie Kruger. My vote is five.

Title (Brazil): "Delírios de um Anormal" ("Delirium of an Abnormal")
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5/10
Hallucinations of a Deranged Mind
Scarecrow-8824 June 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Psychiatrist Dr. Hamilton(Jorge Peres)is tormented by director José Mojica Marins' fictional creation Zé do Caixão who is running rampant in the poor doctor's mind, threatening to attain his wife, Tânia(Magna Miller), who he considers the perfect, superior woman to bear him a son. Merely an excuse to use footage from other movies, José Mojica Marins crafts a bizarre tale of mindwarp proposing the possibility that creation can manifest itself in a form outside the cinematic sphere. His colleagues hope to lure Hamilton out of his nightmares, so he can function once again in society, and be absent of the trauma which currently haunts him. José Mojica Marins even incorporates himself into the story, the creator called upon to assist the doctors/associates of Hamilton's in helping the psychiatrist secure a cure for what ails him. HALLUCINATIONS OF A DERANGED MIND is chock full with freakish imagery such as reptiles, tarantulas crawling over the chests of sleeping women, acid thrown in a female victim's face, demons poking the heads of the damned with pitchforks before whipping them with leather straps, a man being devoured alive by fiends at Caixão's command, victims trapped in walls as they are beaten and pummeled, etc. Essentially, in the hellish plane where Caixão exists in Hamilton's troubled psyche, human suffering and anguish are a constant. Lots of sadism and nudity, we see a collection of odd images shaped and fashioned from Marins' crazed imagination. To be honest, a lot of the scenes in this movie are repetitive which made it a trial for me to sit through. And, to reiterate, a lot of past footage from other Zé do Caixão movies find their way into HALLUCINATIONS OF A DERANGED MIND, so you've seen this all before. Still Marins allows his alter ego a chance once again to be set free from his fictional confines to wreak havoc and cause mayhem.
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4/10
Intense but relentless José Mojica Marins curiosity
Red-Barracuda21 December 2012
I think it would be only fair to say that this film is only recommended for José Mojica Marins completists. Despite being a 'best of' compilation of sorts, this is pretty far from the ideal starting point for those new to the Brazilian maverick. It has a plot but only just. In the main it's a showcase of the most depraved clips from previous Marins films all edited together to create a wild psychedelic acid trip. Incidentally, it occurred to me while watching this that it could be a monumental mistake for an unsuspecting viewer to actually drop acid before embarking on this. It could freak them out pretty badly.

The story in a nutshell has a man experiencing uncontrollable, feverish hallucinations. These entail the fictional character Zé do Caixão stealing his wife Tânia and a variety of other grotesque events in a hell-like world. A group of psychiatrists bring in the real Marins who created the character to try and cure the patient.

The story is merely an excuse to depict extended scenes of perversity, surrealism and gory violence. The soundtrack seems to consist of a barrage of intense moans and groans too. The visual and audio combine to batter the viewer. If nothing else, it's certainly a full-on experience. However, it all gets somewhat repetitive and I would be lying if I didn't admit to being a bit bored quite a lot of the time. It's a pure horror film for sure but for it to work properly these scenes need to be integrated into a narrative where they achieve some overall purpose. As it is, they are just horrible scenes edited together for their own sake. It's all just a bit too one dimensional.
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A thin plot device allows Coffin Joe to edit together a kind of psychedelic collage using outtakes and recycled footage from earlier Coffin Joe classics. For fans only.
Infofreak7 March 2004
In 'Hallucinations Of A Deranged Mind' a psychiatrist (Jorge Peres) is being driven insane with hellish nightmares in which the sinister bogeyman Coffin Joe (Jose Mojica Marins) tries to steal his wife (Magna Miller) for the purpose of creating the perfect woman. His colleagues are so concerned they contact Marins, the creator of the Coffin Joe character, asking for his help, and he readily agrees. The movie mainly consists of outtakes and recycled footage from the earlier Coffin Joe movies including his masterpiece 'Awakening Of The Beast', which are then edited together into a kind of psychedelic collage. Newcomers to the weird and wonderful world of Coffin Joe (which is actually the anglicized name for Marins' Ze do Caixao character he debuted in 'At Midnight I'll Take Your Soul' forty years ago) will probably find 'Hallucinations...' tough going, but if you're already addicted to these extraordinary movies you'll find plenty to keep you amused/amazed. I once described Marins as being a bit like Jodorowsky on a Herschell Gordon Lewis budget, and that gives you some idea of how unique his work is. This is my sixth Coffin Joe experience and I'm now hooked for life!
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1/10
Odds & ends.
morrison-dylan-fan14 October 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Getting hit with the flu at the half way point of the IMDb's Horror Board "October Challenge",I decided to go for the easiest Horror movie that I could get my hands on,and to also find out what co-writer (along with Rubens Francisco Luchetti) /director/actor Jose Mojica Marins had created almost entirely from left over's and "B-side's".

View on the film:

Noted on the back of the Anchor Bay DVD case,that with the exception of 25 minutes,the rest of the film had been made up of left over footage from Marin's past Coffin Joe movies, Marins has the chance to take the movie into a fourth wall breaking,surrealist Horror direction,by making the nightmares that Hamilton is experiencing,be an all encompassing look at the minds of the Coffin Joe's movies audiences/fans.

Sadly,whilst the new 25 minutes cheerfully looks to have been taken from a cheap Soap Opera,Marins and editor Nilcemar Leyart make the movie a painfully dull,unbelievably plodding viewing by having the same moments of the left over/B-footage get mind-numbing played repeatedly without a single sign of meaning or even the slightest sight of cohesiveness,that leads to this being a Coffin of Joe that you will firmly want to nail shut.
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7/10
For advanced students of psychedelic sleaze only.
roganmarshall23 February 2001
According to the box (and as an aside - God bless Something Weird Video!), this feature is cobbled together from material censored out of Marins' earlier "Coffin Joe" films. Though there are plenty of topless girls, and a good bit of torture and mayhem as well, the content of this movie seems to indicate that the censors in question (Brazilian?) had more serious issues with intense hallucination sequences. The handful of scenes which comprise the framing device, some mumbling business about a psychotic guy and the people trying to cure him, are certainly inept and boring enough, but this is actually a relief, because the hallucinations are pretty overwhelming, and you'll be happy for opportunities to catch your breath. An endless barrage of utterly grotesque and disjointed imagery, much of which seems to be intended as literal hellscapes, is liberally flavored with nude women, partially obscured by psychedelic lighting and editing effects, and staged on sets which must be seen to be believed (parts of actors' bodies are often built into the backdrop). It's easier to compare this to other movies than it is to describe it; if you can imagine Kenneth Anger's Satan movies, interspersed with gore scenes from H.G. Lewis, and rationalized by the further insertion of pieces of a fifties health class film on mental hygiene, you're on the right track; and, not to be snotty, but if you can't imagine that, you might not be ready to watch this one. If one can judge by this film alone (as, unfortunately, I must, though that won't be the case for long), Marins' big influences are Jung, Bosch, and E.C. Comics, which places this picture in heavy company by virtue of its aspirations alone, despite its technical shortcomings. (Not to mention that its very incoherency makes this movie a more accurate picture of some forms of schizophrenia than many more "serious" films which address the same subject.)
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5/10
Bizarreness from a deranged mind!!!
elo-equipamentos17 February 2020
Coffin Joe is largely well known worldwide character, made great movies in the past, this weird offer differs from the others, this early movies were substantial, this one made on late seventies is purely bizarre, the plot is minimal about a man who has terrible dreams losing your wife to Coffin Joe, then the real one José Mojica Marins himself is invited to help this odd psychiatric case, Coffin Joe made an excessive visual picture from hell, the continuous use of an imaginary world where nothing make sense, a massive sexploitations scenes as well, psychedelic in several forms and shapes, aimlessly just wander of to nowhere, in fact the movie was made under separate old footages which were refused by brazilian censorship, it explains so many difuse colors between the takes, then Coffin Joe assembled a new picture, the main proposal is display oddity to make money, the name of the movie spoke itself from a deranged mind, that all!!

Resume:

First watch: 2020 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 5.5
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6/10
No innovation here inside Mojica's filmography
guisreis17 June 2021
While showing lots of nightmarish scenes, this is far from the best of José Mojica Marins, and brings nothing new. Indeed, previous issues came back: Coffin Joe wants to find the perfect woman, there is a discussion about the existence of Coffin Joe, and Mojica works together with psychiatrists. More remarkable than that is the fact that only a little more than one third of the film is composed by original footage; all the rest was copied from four previous movies which had suffered with censorship: This night I'll possess yout corpse, The strange world of Coffin Joe, Awakening of the beast, and The bloody exorcism of Coffin Joe. Therefore, for a public nowadays, when it is much less difficult to have access to those former films, I do not think the present one worth watching, although it is not bad.
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1/10
Functions as a 'best of' (or 'worst of') compilation of Marins work.
BA_Harrison15 June 2015
During the opening credits for Hallucinations of a Deranged Mind, a hunchback plays the bongos while circling a semi-naked woman. It's an extremely bizarre image, but pretty standard fare for cult Brazilian director José Mojica Marins, who has carved a whole career from such surreality.

For this particular film, Marins has gathered together numerous scenes from his body of work so far and cobbled them together with a little new footage to tell the story of scientist Dr. Hamilton (Jorge Peres), who suffers from terrible nightmares in which he sees cult horror icon Coffin Joe (played by Marins) trying to make off with his wife Tânia (Magna Miller). In a 'meta moment', the doctor treating Hamilton calls Marins for help, believing that the creator of Coffin Joe might hold the key to curing the nightmares, which in turn gives Marins an idea for his next film.

With the majority of the running time taken up by Hamilton's nightmares, which are essentially a compilation of random freaky imagery taken out of context (not that they had much context to begin with), Hallucinations of a Deranged Mind is an incredibly tedious, meaningless experience and a colossal waste of time, especially for anyone who has already seen most of Marins better known films.
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7/10
All the drugs
BandSAboutMovies14 August 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Dr. Hamílton (Jorge Peres) is a psychiatrist who is having nightmares in which Coffin Joe is taking his wife. Hse seeks help from filmmaker Jose Mojica Marins, who assures him that he created Coffin Joe, who doesn't really exist.

There are only 35 minutes of new footage in this movie with the rest coming from censored scenes from past films including Awakening of the Beast, This Night I'll Possess Your Corpse, The Bloody Exorcism of Coffin Joe and The Strange World of Coffin Joe.

By this point, even though it's mentioned several times in this movie that Coffin Joe was not real, he has become real. He has become more than an idea and is Brazil's national boogeyman. He exists in our imagination as real as an actual living being. Kind of like, oh you know, Freddy Kreuger, who took a similar path 16 years later.

It's also a great way to get out all the strangest stuff that couldn't be seen in the past. Sure, it's barely connected, but if you're looking for a Coffin Joe mixtape to put on with some fuzzed out music for a party, well, this is it.
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10/10
An Exhaustive Summation of A Cutting Edge Career
tash-829 November 2000
Marins' HALLUCINATIONS is a brilliant collage consisting of many disturbing, bizarre, and imaginatively perverse scenes which were censored from his earlier films. A man, Dr. Hamilton, is having nightmares in which Coffin Joe, Marins' demonic alter-ego, repeatedly kidnaps his wife for the purpose of superhuman procreation (a theme which runs through the Coffin Joe films). Fellow psychiatrists seek the help of Marins the filmmaker, in an attempt to force Hamilton back into reality. Of course, Marins mastery of cinematic metaphysics throws all matter of logic and rationality to the dogs, so that what you get instead is a wild journey into the dark realms of the unconscious. The film is as much about Marins and his controversial career as it is an underground "head " film, and to get anything out of it, it's helpful to understand who and what Coffin Joe is. Once you can appreciate Marins' mastery of "the aesthetics of garbage," you'll realise how brilliant and undervalued he is in international cinema.
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Fully captures the aesthetics of Latin American surrealism in a sleaze film (Spoilers!)
zardoz1222 March 2002
Warning: Spoilers
To those who say "Delirios de um amoral" has no plot all I can say is that you weren't paying attention. To wit: a shrink in an un-named Brazilian asylum goes insane, having bizarre halucinations that "Ze do Caixo" (Coffin Joe)wants to take his wife and make love to her, producing a "superior being" of some sort. In between those halucinations, "Dr. AM-il-TON" sees Ze do Caixo torture people (a good fake finger eating and toungue-pulling happen near the end); walk though a dark tunnel made of faces, buttocks, breasts, and bellies; make women appear and disappear in black and white; all while we see the good doctor standing in front of a black background making horrified faces. Hamilton's associates at the asylum call Jose Mojica Marins (maker of the other Coffin Joe movies) to appear before him to break the delirium, and the director does. I'm not telling how it ends, or even if it does. In this surrealistic world (all of Hamiliton's delirium - or is it?), we see the sort of earthy symbolism of Frieda Kahlo and the sort of paintings you can buy on Tijuana street corners. Women as goddesses or demons, the power of wierd little men wearing capes and top hats whose eyebrows expand and contract and who can speak in echo, bizarre set pieces like those listed above - all of it would have made a great mural; instead we get a good sleaze film.
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Hallucinations of a Deranged Mind
Michael_Elliott12 January 2009
Hallucinations of a Deranged Mind (1978)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

I'll have to say right off that to date this is my first Coffin Joe film. From what I've read this might not have been the one to start off with as this here only features about twenty-five minutes worth of "newly" shot scenes mixed in with outtakes, deleted footage and censored footage from the previous films. I guess you could call this a real cut and paste job but the end results are pretty good. In the film, a doctor is having strange visions of Coffin Joe (Jose Mojica Marins) coming to steal his wife so that the evil one can create a super being. I've read that Coffin Joe's creation and stealing of women is something that runs through all of his film so there's nothing new there but I must admit that the film really captured my imagination. I'm not sure how many people will be attracted to a film like this but if you like LSD-type mind trips then this is a good one. For the most part we get very little story and instead just countless strange visuals, which range from cannibalism to naked women to other strange acts of violence being carried out by Coffin Joe. A lot of times we see the same clips being used over and over and while many are going to read this and think lazy, the director actually does a very stylish job with his low-budget nature. I had always seen images of Marins as Coffin Joe but seeing him in actual was a lot of fun. His entire look and feel were quite attractive for a horror film of this type. I haven't seen too many films from Brazil but this one here certainly has me interested in checking out the rest of the Coffin Joe films, which includes a brand new one just recently finished filming.
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Very strange and utterly impossible to follow movie
Vilmar23 March 1999
This film, from what I have read, is the censored material that was cut from Marins' older films. It looks to me like this material was thrown together to form something close to a movie, but very short of a plot or anything else for that matter. The movie is impossible to follow and had I not paid my own money to see it, I would not have finished watching it. I would not advise anyone to watch this film unless they wanted to see what, in my opinion, is one of the worst films ever.
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