Quote:
Originally Posted by neverending
I was actually about to bring in an existential viewpoint- but with a different conclusion. Coffin Joe is a great example of existential man- he believes in nothing more than himself. He tells people he does not believe in spirits. He clearly considers himself a moral man-when he comes across the man & boy he tells the man to stop abusing his son. He also tells the boy to stop crying and act like a man.
To an existential man there is nothing beyond person existance, and there is nothing greater than living according to his own code. When his victims come back - at God's bidding? - he doesn't capitulate. They kill him... but is that a victory? Coffin Joe never renounces his beliefs. Even in death he has remained true to himself- he has won.
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Very excellent, NE. I really like this idea too.
And to further the point in the context of the Coffin Joe series: he keeps coming back again and again and again, each time unchanged.
Go, go Coffin Joe.
I always loved the fact that in Brazil, Coffin Joe was so recognized as a character of general nastiness that parents would scold their children, "Be good. Don't be a Coffin Joe!"