Calgary Herald

The Raven ready to take flight

Poe thriller does author justice, he says

- ROGER MOORE

JohnCusack has heard the sniping. He’s Internet savvy, a big-time Twitter user. So he knew Edgar Allan Poe fanatics were complainin­g about the movie he was making about the writer. He knows the early reviews of The Raven, in which he plays the poet/ thriller writer as a haunted man on the trail of a serial killer, haven’t been kind.

“Poe probably deserved better than this movie which turns his heritage into a sub Se7en-style serial killer thriller,” sniffed Britain’s Birmingham Post. But Cusack isn’t taking that lying down.

“Somebody I’ve read said, ‘Oh, he wasn’t some heroic man of action.’ And I go, ‘Oh really? He went to West Point. He was kicked out, but he was there. He got in.’ And he was a swimmer. It’s not a stretch to think of him trying to solve a mystery, a series of crimes. He had an analytical, mathematic­al mind. You can see that in the writing. He called it ‘rationatio­n.’ But basically, he invented forensics in his fiction.”

And Cusack is just getting started. An actor fond of finding the dark side in light characters and bringing lightness to the dark ones, Cusack found Poe to be right up his alley. At 45, Cusack has lived his movie- making life by making more interestin­g choices than commercial ones. He’s just hoping filmgoers get into Poe the way he got into the author of The Tell-tale Heart, The Raven and The Cask of Amontillad­o — the 19th-century author who popularize­d the short story, invented the thriller, detective fiction and, some say, science fiction. The Raven reimagines Poe’s last days and the mystery surroundin­g his death.

“I loved the conceit here,” Cusack says. “Poe getting caught up in one of his stories, trapped by a fan who is mimicking the murders in his work. He wrote about gruesome crimes . . . And he wrote about people going mad, as in The Tell-tale Heart.”

The movie acknowledg­es Poe’s mental state, but makes note of his scathing wit and wicked wordplay.

“He was on the verge of madness, a lot of the time. He was a poet who wanted to understand death, walked around graveyards, wanted to scare the hell out of himself. What a crazy, wonderful character to play.”

The screenwrit­ers for The Raven reference various Poe works and have the serial killer connect the murders by names, addresses and manners of death depicted in Poe’s fiction. They establish a “ticking clock” element to the pursuit by borrowing plot elements from Poe’s The Premature Burial. Cusack wanted “the real Poe” to be as present as possible, so he pushed for quotations from the stories and Poe’s own letters.

“‘I could distinctly hear the sound of darkness as it stole over the horizon,’ ” Cusack says, noting a favourite line. “He revered women and everyone that he loved died in his arms, coughing up blood. ‘I could not love except where Death. Was mingling his with Beauty’s breath.’ Poe transmuted all the tragedies of his life into his writing.”

And that, Cusack argues, is what The Raven does.

“He was a paradox, a larger-than-life figure who was a whole lot of things at once. He certainly wasn’t just a melancholy, inwardlook­ing and intense artist. He was a man, too. We wanted to show a lot of facets to the man.”

And some Poe fan film critics are buying into that, praising its “literate script, atmospheri­c direction, some suitably grisly murder sequences and a superb performanc­e from John Cusack.” (Viewlondon)

Whatever others read into the film, Cusack says he “never saw it as some lame attempt at turning this guy into an action hero. Seriously, if you like Poe, if you know something about this frail, vain, but also courageous, pioneering writer, I think you’ll see we did justice to him.”

 ??  ?? John Cusack plays poet/thriller writer Edgar Allan Poe in the movie The Raven.
John Cusack plays poet/thriller writer Edgar Allan Poe in the movie The Raven.

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