
Audiobooks - 5,239 Classics Ready to Listen
Book and Education
App
This is the top rated audiobook app on the planet. Browse our handpicked collections, download any...

The Bucket: Memories of an Inattentive Childhood
Book
The Bucket by Allan Ahlberg - the enthralling childhood story one of Britain's best-loved children's...

Paradise Lost by John Milton
Podcast
Magnificent in its scale and scope, this monumental poem by the blind poet John Milton was the first...

The Legacy of R. D. Laing: An Appraisal of His Contemporary Relevance
Book
The name R. D. Laing continues to be widely recognized by those in the psychotherapy community in...

Eye of the Sixties: Richard Bellamy and the Transformation of Modern Art
Book
In 1959, Richard Bellamy was a witty, poetry-loving beatnik on the fringe of the New York art world...

James Dean Bradfield recommended Tolerance by The Blue Aeroplane in Music (curated)

Simon Pegg recommended Annie Hall (1977) in Movies (curated)

Johnny Marr recommended track Foggy Notion by The Velvet Underground in Gold by The Velvet Underground in Music (curated)

Connor Sheffield (293 KP) rated The Raven (2012) in Movies
Apr 27, 2017
I am a poet and a writer, and my biggest inspiration as a writer has always been Edgar Allan Poe. I love the gothic horror, the tragedy, the macabre, and everything that makes Edgar Allan Poe the legend he is today.
With that said, let me tell you why I love this movie. It involves connections to some of Poe's greatest work, and not his poetry necessarily, it's actually more about his stories. Telltale Heart, Pit and the Pendulum and others that are all combined into the twisted mind of our antagonist who uses these stories to commit his crimes and leave evidence behind that only Poe himself would be able to figure out.
It's a brilliant crime thriller that delves into the mind of someone who is essentially Poe's biggest fan, but in a very dark and twisted way that gives us a fictional story about what happened during Poe's last days before he was found dead on a park bench. It's a known fact that Poe's last days remain a mystery and so this film had the opportunity to really play with some great ideas and they were executed brilliantly.
Speaking of execution this film is very grim and gory. One scene involving the story of The Pit and the Pendulum has us watch as a Pendulum drops lower and lower before slicing through a man's stomach like a warm knife through butter. It doesn't leave a lot to the imagination which gives this film some charm and makes it stand out from the rest of the Poe Film adaptations.
John Cusack plays the lengend himself, Edgar Allan Poe and brings a very interesting performance, that seems to suggest Poe thought himself as a higher intelligence to those around him, and he isn't shy to announce it.
Sharing the screen with Cusack, includes names such as Luke Evans who portrays Detective Fields, the detective I mentioned earlier that seeks Poe's assistance in the murder case. Brendan Gleeson portrays a very protective father named Charles Hamilton, who despises Poe being anywhere near his daughter Emily Hamilton, portrayed by Alice Eve. However there differences are put aside as the hunt for the missing Emily continues.
The story transitions well from scene to scene and story to story as each clue leads to the next, and eventually we discover the culprit who I shall not name here because I wish to leave the tension and suspense for you as you watch this film.