IMDB Ratings: 6.4/10 from 27,699 users |
The Raven is a 2012 American thriller film directed by James McTeigue and based on a screenplay by Ben Livingston and Hannah Shakespeare. It stars John Cusack, Alice Eve, Brendan Gleeson and Luke Evans. It was released March 9, 2012 in Canada, Ireland, the United Kingdom and the United States and on April 27, 2012.
Plot
The film opens in 19th century Maryland – where several Baltimore
policemen are chasing after the screams of a woman in an apartment. The
police arrive at the apartment to discover a woman sprawled on the floor
with her throat sliced open and the corpse of her daughter stuffed in
the chimney. Detective Emmett Fields is called to assist in the
investigation and discovers that the crime resembles a fictional murder
in the short story "The Murders in the Rue Morgue", which is part of a collection of stories penned by the writer Edgar Allan Poe.
Poe has become a social pariah and penniless drunkard whose stories
have not been circulated for some time. He has fallen in love with the
beautiful young Emily Hamilton and desires to marry her but faces
opposition from her father Captain Hamilton, a military man who loathes
Poe and goes to the length of threatening physical violence. Poe is
brought to see Fields for questioning and is horrified to learn someone
is using his stories as the backdrop for a series of murders. Fields
then proposes that Poe volunteer his services to help the police catch
the killer and the writer agrees to the task.
The two men are called to investigate the murder of literary critic
Ludwig Griswold, the man who became Poe's rival after a feud that was
published in the Baltimore newspapers. Poe realizes the gruesome crime
resembles a scene from "The Pit and the Pendulum"
as Fields notices a red demon mask near the corpse. The two then deduce
that the scene of the next crime will take place at Captain Hamilton's
annual masquerade ball - a scene that will resemble the Masked Ball in "The Masque of the Red Death".
Fields assigns several members of the Baltimore Police to go
undercover as guests at the Masked Ball. Sometime before midnight, at
the height of the festivities, a man on horseback dressed in a skeleton
costume appears. Fields shoots the man only to learn he was an actor
hired for the entertainment and receives an anonymous note. Poe then
realizes Emily has been kidnapped, meaning the event was all a
distraction. It's revealed in the killer's note that he will continue to
commit murders and leave clues to Emily's location. The killer then
threatens to kill Emily if Poe does not start writing columns for the
newspaper that describe the brutal combination of fact and fiction -
forcing Poe to comply with the request in order to save Emily.
The local Medical School's anatomy class discovers a live raven and
the corpse of a prostitute in theatrical clothing. Poe and Fields
investigate and deduce the scene resembles "The Mystery of Marie RogĂȘt"
except for one detail - the blood on the corpse's hands was not an
element of Poe's story. The two soon learn the woman was an actress in
costume as Lady Macbeth and rush to the theatre where the victim worked,
demanding to see all the stage hands. All the stage hands are accounted
for except for Maurice, a sailor on leave after his ship landed in
Baltimore. Poe and Fields notice a mysterious figure running along the
catwalks and pursue him but the figure escapes. Fields later makes an
off-handed comment that the name of the ship Maurice arrived on is the Fortunato - which prompts Poe to realize the next murder will resemble "The Cask of Amontillado".
Poe and Fields search tunnels under the city with several policemen
and discover an area with fresh brickwork, an area that might be where
Emily is being held. The officers smash through the brick and discover
what appears to be a woman with blonde hair in the costume Emily wore
the night she was kidnapped. But the body is revealed to be that of the
sailor Maurice, who was dressed to resemble Emily after he was killed
and buried in the niche.
Two clues are found on Maurice: a pocket watch that was stopped at
12:27 and then stuffed into his mouth, and a tattoo on his back that had
some flesh carved out of it. Poe and Fields deduce these clues will
give the location of Emily, and Poe realizes a church in Baltimore
called Holy Cross is where Emily must be. Everyone races to the church
but they find it locked. While attempting to break in, one policeman
whose name is PC Cantrell shoots at the killer but the latter jumps from
the roof and slits PC Cantrell's throat. Poe and Fields hear the
shooting and race to catch the killer who shoots Fields and
incapacitates him. Poe takes after the killer in a horse race but the
killer escapes. Poe walks back to the church where he meets up with
Captain Hamilton, who finally apologizes for his treatment of Poe.
Fields discovers an empty grave at the church that has Emily's name
written on a wooden cross.
Poe then decides to write a new column in which he tells the killer
that he's tired of this game and is willing to exchange his life for
Emily's if only the killer would release Emily. Poe dashes this new
column off quickly, the editor loves it, and Ivan the typesetter is then
tasked with getting the column to print. People in Baltimore, while
still enjoying the excitement of the murders, decide to burn down Poe's
house because they blame his stories for inspiring this bloodshed.
Poe then moves in with Fields because he no longer has lodgings. In
the morning, the maid gives Poe both the newspaper and a letter from the
killer. Poe deduces that the killer left the note on the doorstep the
night before. Then, the paper boy came by and put the newspaper on top
of the note after it stopped raining. Poe therefore deduces that the
killer is someone who read his new column before it was published. Poe
then assumes the killer is the newspaper editor.
Fields, meanwhile, is having surgery with no anesthetic to remove a
bullet from his shoulder. The doctor uses a magnet to find the bullet in
his flesh, an experience Fields later uses to realize that the ink the
killer used in all his notes was magnetic. Since this is the type of ink
used in newspaper printing, Fields later independently realizes that
someone at the paper is the killer.
Poe reaches the newspaper office and finds the editor dead, with his
hands separated from his arms and his body arranged at his desk as if
writing a letter. In front of the editor is a note that reads, "Getting
Warmer!". Ivan congratulates him on finding him, and then explains that
he missed Poe's writing so much that he decided to make up a story of
his own and then act it out in real life so that Poe would have to write
about it.
Poe pulls out a gun but Ivan reminds him that Emily will die if he
pulls the trigger. So Poe hands the gun over to Ivan and tells him that
he can kill him if he will release Emily. Ivan gives Poe a vial of
poison and tells him to drink it, so that he can keep talking to his
"favorite writer" while the poison slowly kills him. Once Poe is too
weak to go for help, Ivan tells Poe that he's moving to Paris because he
wants to do the same to Jules Verne. Poe learns that Ivan will be traveling under the name "Reynolds".
Before Ivan leaves, he makes a reference to "The Tell-Tale Heart"
and Poe realizes that Emily is buried under the floor beneath him. He
breaks through the floor into the cellar and digs Emily out. The police
get there and put Emily in an ambulance. Poe wanders off to a park bench
to die. While he's sitting there, a bearded man comes over and says he
recognizes him as "Edgar Poe" the famous writer. That pleases Poe, but
the poison has him so addled, all he can say to the man is "tell Fields
his name is Reynolds", which the man interprets as nonsense. Later, at
the hospital where Poe is pronounced dead, the doctor tells Fields that
Poe's last words were unintelligible, that he had "said that Fields'
last name was Reynolds".
Ivan is seen exiting a train station in France, and as he enters a
carriage Fields greets him with a pistol. Then, Ivan jumps at Fields and
a gunshot is heard.
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