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6%% This list of examples has been alphabetized. Please add your example in the proper place. Thanks!
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13[[quoteright:350:[[Literature/MobyDick https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/moby_dick_9.jpg]]]]
14 [[caption-width-right:350:[[Literature/MobyDick “...the coffin life-buoy shot lengthwise from the sea, fell over, and floated by my side...”]]]]
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16A coffin is, most commonly, a symbol for death. Its sole purpose is to serve as a container for dead people. That is why it can have a strong effect to subvert that connotation by using a coffin as a means for the hero to save his life: a symbol of death as a life saver.
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18The most common variation is for the hero to hide in the coffin. Maybe he's being chased by someone across a graveyard, or maybe he's illegally examining a deceased loved one when he hears their murderer approaching. This comes in two flavours: the coffin may be empty, which can have a very eerie feeling and may evoke pictures of being BuriedAlive; or it may already be occupied, which can either be very [[{{Squick}} squicky]] or PlayedForLaughs, with the hero apologizing for the intrusion.
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20Hiding oneself in a coffin or sarcophagus is not the only option covered by this trope, though. Most coffins are made of light wood, so they float on water and can thus serve as a makeshift lifeboat, and inventive heroes can find other uses for them as well.
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22Of course, the heroes are not the only ones who can do this. If the villain of a story uses this, the connotations may be different: After the danger is gone, they may emerge from the coffin, thus giving the impression that they are somehow connected to death.
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24Especially creepy when the coffin is, for one reason or another, the hero's own.
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26Should this backfire on the hero, they could very well become BuriedAlive. Alternatively (and less NightmareFuel-y), it can lead to WakingUpAtTheMorgue.
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28May come attached to FakingTheDead if the hero pretends to actually belong in the coffin. Compare CrammingTheCoffin, where the person hiding (or, more accurately, being hidden) in the coffin is already dead. Compare also the BodybagTrick, which uses a [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin bodybag]] instead of a coffin, but can have similar symbolic effect.
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30----
31!!Examples:
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33[[foldercontrol]]
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35[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
36* [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventurePhantomBlood Part One]] of ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'' ends with Erina Joestar (née Pendelton) surviving the destruction of her honeymoon ship by floating in Dio Brando's bomb-proof coffin.
37** In addition, Erina was also able to save a baby whose mother had been killed by one of Dio's zombies. [[spoiler:This baby would later grow up to be Lisa Lisa from [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureBattleTendency Part Two]].]]
38** [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Part Three]] gives a villainous example in that [[spoiler:Dio Brando used that same coffin to survive in the ocean for 100 years]].
39[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Comic Books]]
42* ''ComicBook/GIJoeIDW'': Kwinn and Lighthorse smuggle Snake-Eyes across the border by hiding him a coffin inside a hearse and say they are returning a family member to be buried in his native land.
43* In the ''ComicBook/{{Tintin}}'' album ''Recap/TintinCigarsOfThePharaoh'' Tintin and Professor Sarcophagus are drugged and then smuggled on board a ship inside coffins, then thrown overboard into the sea when the smugglers are nearly caught by coastal police. They manage to open the coffins and drift back to shore.
44[[/folder]]
45
46[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
47* In ''Film/AFistfulOfDollars'', Creator/ClintEastwood's nameless character hides in a coffin and watches the rival gangs running the town go at each other.
48* In ''Film/FuneralInBerlin'' this is supposed to be the method by which an East German defector is to be smuggled to the west; but the whole thing is a Soviet setup to catch the ones who smuggle out defectors.
49* In ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheLastCrusade'', the Brotherhood of the Cruciform Sword sets fire to the tomb complex Indy and Dr. Schneider are exploring for clues to the Holy Grail. The pair overturn Sir Richard's stone coffin as shelter from the flames.
50* Creator/LaurelAndHardy used this in one of their first films, ''A-Haunting We Will Go'', where they are escorting a coffin, not knowing that a criminal gang leader has hidden in it to escape the police.
51* In ''Film/OBrotherWhereArtThou'', towards the end of the movie, [[spoiler:the evil sheriff shows up at [=McGill=]'s cabin ready to hang [=McGill=] and his two companion protagonists (never mind that they've been pardoned by the governor), and has three gravediggers with coffins at the ready, but just then the valley floods (as part of a rural electrification program) and everybody is swept away; the protagonists pop up in the water and are able to cling to one of the coffins.]]
52* In ''Film/OnceBitten'', Mark and his LoveInterest hide in a coffin when the Countess and her aide are searching the house for them. [[spoiler: It doesn't work for very long, but long enough for the love interest to ''very quickly'' relieve Mark of his virginity, rendering him unsuitable for the vampiress's tastes.]]
53* Captain Jack Sparrow hides with a dead man in a coffin to escape from prison at the beginning of ''Film/PiratesOfTheCaribbeanDeadMansChest''.
54* ''Film/{{Rosewood|1997}}'': The hero's mother is killed by white racists attacking the black town, and the hero himself is smuggled out in her coffin.
55* ''Film/Terminator3RiseOfTheMachines'': The Terminator carries John Connor and Kate Brewster through a hail of bullets and out of harm's way in a steel coffin.
56* ''Film/{{Zwartboek}}'':
57** The Jewish refugee Rachel passes through German inspection to her new hiding place by posing as a corpse and being smuggled by a pair of sympathetic undertakers.
58** Subverted at the end when [[spoiler:the treacherous Dr. Franken tries to escape with his loot through Allied inspection by hiding in a coffin transported by a corrupt undertaker he paid off. He is intercepted by the surviving two resistance members, and suffocated by bolting the casket shut.]]
59[[/folder]]
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61[[folder:Literature]]
62* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
63** In ''Literature/{{Pyramids}}'', when Teppic rescues Ptraci from prison, he hides her in an empty sarcophagus, leaving it open a crack. The next morning, the high priest Dios comes along, spots the slightly ajar coffin, triumphantly has the guards open it, to reveal... wood shavings. Ptraci had gone out earlier to answer nature's call, and once the confused Dios had left (even checking the sarcophagus containing the king's mummy), went back into hiding.
64** In ''Literature/CarpeJugulum'', Agnes Nitt blags her way into a castle being taken over by vampires by hiding in a coffin being ferried in by cart. The vampires' guards assume this is a delivery of bedroom furniture and do not bother to check.
65** Wizards tend to attempt to cheat Death by sealing themselves into tombs surrounded by their best arsenal of wards and amulets. The usual reaction: "[[AC:A bit cramped in here, isn't it?]]"
66* In the backstory of Creator/JohnDicksonCarr's Literature/DrGideonFell novel ''The Hollow Man'', this is part of the story that leads to the killer's vengeful motivation. Three brothers escaped from a prison by feigning death and allowing themselves to be BuriedAlive, but the one who managed to escape from his coffin first ran away and left the other two to die. One survived and pursued him.
67* ''Literature/EvaLuna'': [[spoiler:Elvira, a mother figure to Eva,]] saves up to buy a coffin to avoid being buried as an indigent. She frequently uses it as AnOddPlaceToSleep to prepare herself for death. Later on, it ends up saving her from drowning during a flood.
68* While not exactly a coffin, an interesting case appears in ''Literature/GhostStory'', when Harry Dresden seeks protection in his open grave, "gifted" to him by an old adversary. The catch is that Harry [[spoiler:is already [[NotQuiteDead (mostly) dead]]. He's a ghost, and as a being of pure spirit is at risk of being destroyed by the light of the sun without sheltering in some sort of magical refuge. His grave fit the bill.]]
69* In ''Literature/HeavenOfficialsBlessingTianGuanCiFu'', the ghost calamity Ship-Sinking Black Water has the power to make anything sink except a coffin that has contained a dead person. Hua Cheng, being aware of his fellow ghost's powers, uses that information to get Xie Lian to safety during the Black Water arc, with Hua Cheng as a ghost counting as the dead person.
70* ''Literature/IfThisGoesOn''. A member of LaResistance mentions to the protagonist that he was hypnotised into a comatose state, then smuggled across the country in a coffin.
71* In ''Literature/LesMiserables'', Jean Valjean escapes from the convent of Petit-Picpus (which is being watched by police who suspect that he's hiding inside) in the coffin of a nun who has just died and is being taken out for burial.
72* In ''Literature/MobyDick'', Ishmael survives the sinking of the ''Pequod'' by clinging to the coffin intended for Queequeg.
73* Invoked in Creator/TerryPratchett's ''Literature/{{Nation}}'', in which a ship's cook prepares for the possibility that his vessel might sink by bringing a coffin on board for himself ... and outfitting it with fresh water, fishing gear, and a small collapsible sail. In the wake of the tsunami, he's found sailing his coffin by a rescue ship.
74* {{Justified|Trope}} in ''Literature/PaleHorseComing''. One of the characters is a coffin maker and arranged to have a load of coffins shipped to the town of Thebes in order to [[spoiler: aid a prison escape and town evacuation]].
75* {{Justified|Trope}} in ''Franchise/TheWitcher: Literature/TheLastWish''. Geralt hides inside a striga's stone sarcophagus both for protection and because his contract is to cure the striga, King Foltest's daughter Adda. Spending a night near a striga's coffin breaks the curse long enough for one to suppress it with various charms, and the stone lid is just handy protection. (The sequence also appears in the opening cinematic of ''VideoGame/TheWitcher'' video game.)
76[[/folder]]
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78[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
79* ''Series/AlfredHitchcockPresents'' episode "Final Escape", remade under the same title in ''The New Alfred Hitchcock Presents'', subverts this when a male prisoner (female in the remake) plans an escape using this method. The prisoner is supposed to hide in the next coffin being used, then the prison undertaker is supposed to come and dig the coffin up once the coast is clear. [[spoiler:When the prisoner feels that they've been waiting too long, they light a match to see that they're buried with ... the undertaker.]]
80* ''Series/BreakoutKings'': In "Steaks", two convicts murder an obese inmate and then hide in his coffin in order to escape.
81* ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer''
82** In "Bad Girls", Buffy hides from the [[{{Mooks}} Eliminati]] in a sarcophagus.
83** In "Goodbye Iowa", when Initiative soldiers kick down the door to his crypt, Spike hides beneath a corpse in a sarcophagus. Note that vampires do not usually inhabit coffins in this universe.
84* ''Series/{{Dexter}}'' eludes the police when they raid the Trinity Killer's house (he was there to kill Trinity) by hiding in a coffin that Trinity had made himself until enough time had passed that Dexter (a member of the police department) could realistically have arrived.
85* In the ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}'' episode "Deathlock", Mac uses this ploy to be carried out of East Germany (with stolen microfilm). Of course in this case the coffin is also a fully functional motorized water vehicle.
86* ''Series/TheSarahJaneAdventures'': Galactic undertakers try to steal the Doctor's TARDIS by faking evidence of the Doctor's death so that two of his former companions (Jo Jones (nee Grant) and Sarah Jane Smith) will come to the funeral, where their memories can be harnessed to create a key to the TARDIS. The Doctor shows up and gets Jo and Sarah Jane to remember all of their adventures, overloading the memory-capturing machine which, [[SarcasmMode naturally]], starts [[MadeOfExplodium counting down towards blowing up]]. Jo and Sarah Jane survive by hiding in the lead-lined coffin created for the Doctor.
87[[/folder]]
88
89[[folder:Video Games]]
90* Joked with in ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaSymphonyOfTheNight'', where you save your game by going to your coffin.
91* Near the end of ''VideoGame/LauraBow 2'', Laura evades the killer by hiding in a sarcophagus.
92* At the end of the TutorialLevel in ''VideoGame/RememberMe'', Nilin escapes [[TheAlcatraz La Bastille]] by hiding in one of the coffins meant to transport dead prisoners' bodies out.
93* In ''VideoGame/{{Skyrim}}'', a Dark Brotherhood-aligned Dovahkiin needs to hide inside the Night Mother's coffin when [[spoiler:The Penitus Oculatus raze the Falkreath sanctuary]].
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96[[folder:Webcomics]]
97* [[https://www.oglaf.com/closed-casket/ This]] (SFW) ''Webcomic/{{Oglaf}}'' comic features the "multi-coffin," which is filled with useful tools and weapons, has a removable bottom panel so you can walk around, a slot to see and shoot crossbow bolts out of, and can be used as a canoe. It's not intended to save your life, but to help you out if you get [[AnimateDead raised by a necromancer]].
98---> '''Skeleton:''' Demand one in your will!
99* In ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'' [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0900.html #900]], the heroes use the coffin of [[spoiler:Girard Draketooth]] to survive the explosion created by [[spoiler:Girard's Gate being destroyed]].
100[[/folder]]
101
102[[folder:Western Animation]]
103* ''WesternAnimation/{{Disenchantment}}'': King Zøg tries to do this in [[Recap/DisenchantmentS3E1SubterraneanHomesickBlues Subterranean Homesick Blues]], pretending to have succumbed to his injuries so that Pendergast can smuggle him out in a coffin away from the scheming Odval. Too bad he's found out by the Arch-Druidess and BuriedAlive.
104[[/folder]]
105
106[[folder:Real Life]]
107* Rabbi Yohanan Ben-Zakai hid in a coffin to escape the Roman siege of Jerusalem; the coffin was carried outside the city by his followers for his "burial".
108[[/folder]]

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