With today marking the 162nd anniversary of Edgar Allan Poe’s death, the trailer debuted for next March’s “The Raven,” a mystery-thriller that stars John Cusack as Poe.
My take: Perhaps the third time will the charm for director James
McTeigue (“V for Vendetta,” “Ninja Assassin”). Being a longtime reader
of Poe, this one looks packed with elements straight from his stories,
including “The Pit and the Pendulum,” “The Premature Burial,” “The Cask
of Amontillado,” “The Masque of the Red Death,” “The Murders in the Rue
Morgue” and, duh, the poem from which the flick takes its title.
Plus, I’m also a fan of Alice Eve’s curves.
But March 9, 2012, is a long way away. Until then, Relativity Media offers these 20 “unusual facts about Poe, the ‘Enigmatic Master of Darkness’”:
• Poe wrote a fabricated news story of a balloon trip across the ocean to garner attention and publicity in New York City.
• Poe was a champion for higher wages for writers and international copyright law, as his writings were continuously published without him getting credit or compensation.
• Prior to becoming Poe’s wife at the age of 13, his female cousin Virginia acted as a courier, delivering letters to Poe’s lady loves.
• From 1949 to 2009, a mysterious figure has left a half-empty bottle of cognac and 3 roses on Poe’s grave every day on his birthday.
• Poe formulated rules for the short story, including that it should relate a complete action and take place within one day in one place.
• Poe was deeply interested by cryptography, the creation and translation of secret codes, and was very proud of his ability to translate them. He would challenge readers of various publications where he worked to send him codes to decipher and, by all accounts, he seemed able to unlock the secrets to any he received.
• Poe’s lifelong dream of owning and operating his own publication never came to fruition.
• Poe met with Charles Dickens while Dickens was in the U.S. on a lecture tour, and solicited his help with getting published in England — nothing ever came of it. • Poe’s grandfather was an important figure in the American Revolution, contributing a large sum of his own money to outfit local branches of the Continental Army.
• Poe’s grandmother, personally sewed over 500 soldiers’ uniforms for Lafayette’s troops as they passed through Baltimore.
• Poe joined the Army in 1827, lying to recruiters about his age and name. He also published his first collection of poetry during this time. He achieved the rank of Sergeant Major.
• Poe experienced periods of extreme destitution, often having to burn his furniture to keep warm during the winter.
• Poe successfully sought expulsion from West Point. That being said, he was one of the top students in his class.
• Wrote poetic tributes to all the pivotal women in his life.
• Poe had two biological siblings, but all were raised in separate foster homes.
• Poe’s childhood hero was Lord Byron.
• The Poe House and Museum in Baltimore is in jeopardy of being closed in mid-2012 due to Baltimore City budget cuts. The city eliminated the Museum’s funding in 2010.
• Edgar Allan Poe was buried in Westminster Burying Ground and had no headstone for years after his death. In 1860, Poe’s relatives commissioned a small headstone that erroneously listed Poe’s birth date as January 20 instead of January 19 and was destroyed in a train accident before it made it to the gravesite.
• In 1875 Poe’s remains were dug up and moved to a memorial site to be near his family and a gravestone was placed in the wrong spot and was moved around several times.
• This lead people to wonder not only where Poe’s original burial spot was but also if the man who was moved to the spot by the memorial is even Edgar Allan Poe. —Rod Lott
For rent: 1 bed, 1 bath, 1 serial killer. Pets OK.
Thriller Rod Lott
While the box reads "Good Neighbors," the credits read "Good
Neighbours." Regardless of spelling, the Canadian thriller from
writer/director Jacob Tierney is intelligent, suspenseful and almost
unpredictable.
Comedy Rod Lott
Álex de la Iglesia, Spain's clown prince of cinema, making a movie about
warring clowns? It's such a natural, I'm surprised he hadn't done it
before now.
The local arts and entertainment-supporting initiative Buffalo Lounge will graze around Oklahoma City this week, for two separate events.
The Lounge, which debuted at this year’s South by Southwest and has appeared at Norman Music Festival, deadCENTER Film Festival and the Tulsa International Film Festival, will be on site at tomorrow’s grand opening of Whole Foods Market at 6001 N. Western and at Saturday’s grand reopening of Myriad Gardens. A bevy of local musicians are scheduled to play all day long at both events. Each lineup is listed below.
An Oklahoma City University grad built his own version of a bicycle. Then he took it across the country.
Features Carmen Forman
One Oklahoma City University graduate is attracting a lot of attention
driving around on his new version of a bicycle, and he can’t help but
love it.
Assuming the Internet doesn’t collapse today with the debut of the first trailer for next summer’s sure-to-be-a-record-breaker, “The Avengers,” feast your eyes on it:
OKG7 things to do Gazette staff
Pianist Jon Kimura Parker, aka “Concerto Man,” will woo audience members
when he performs “Two Aspects of Romanticism” — Schumann and
Rachmaninoff, to be exact — with the Oklahoma City Philharmonic on
Saturday.