An Evening of Edgar Allan Poe: Movies about Writing

Last one from the 70s and this one is another bit of cheating.

Imagine Poe lived to be a famous man in his 60s with a beard and chance to go on the stage to recite several of his works. That’s essentially what this 1970 television special did with Vincent Price acting out four different tales alone with sets and costumes. Technically, Price is playing four different characters, not Poe, however it feels like something Poe would’ve done if he’d had the money. He admired Charles Dickens who did something similar with his public appearances. Plus, Poe’s birth mother was an actress. You can’t tell me he didn’t think about taking the stage. Additionally, Price makes you really listen to the words and admire the writing of the man long dead as he recites word for word.

The Bat: Movies about Writing

Hey there, Vincent Price! Fancy finding another of your movies I can put on this list!

I’m kidding! I already know I’d do this movie a long while ago because it’s one of the few of his starring roles I’ve - GASP - NEVER SEEN! Then I got about a quarter of the way in and realized I have the book it’s based on. It just had a different title. Hollywood, you tricked me [shakes fist].

Of course, I can also understand why this movie is in the public domain after watching. It’s . . . low budget to say the least.

Mystery author Cornelia Van Gorder (Agnes Moorehead) is staying in a secluded country house with her gossipy maid Lizzie which was rented from a relative of the local bank president. The problem - a local killer of women is on the loose known as the Bat and this is scaring off the help. Van Gorder is a logical woman who does not fear rumors and has a wonderfully dry sense of human. This comes in handy as, besides a murderer, the bank discovers that their president John Fleming (Harvey Stephens) embezzled a million dollars in securities and threatens his doctor/friend Malcolm Wells (oh - there’s Vincent Price) to fake Fleming’s death.

SPOILER ALERT - (although this is in the first 15 minutes of film)!

Instead of faking it, Wells just flat out murders Fleming and decides to look for the hidden million dollars. And where else would he hide it than in his old family home full which Van Gorder is currently renting. You see where this is going, right?

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Lizzie worries that the ghost of Fleming will haunt the house, but worries more about the inconvenience it creates as “ghosts are allergic” to her. Van Gorder takes all of Lizzie’s comments with fun, sarcastic comments (seriously, Agnes Moorehead is quite good in this). Lizzie reads about how the Bat slashes women to death with steel claws and Van Gorder responds, “Well, that’s a charming little caper. I’ll have to try it some time.” Lizzie looks horrified and the author adds, “In a book!” There is another moment where Vincent Price asks about her aim with a pistol. Van Gorder tells him that there is a gun in every book she’s ever written and she never writes about anything she’s not familiar with. As I always say, never check an author’s browser history or library checkout list. You won’t like what you find.

However, this leaves you wondering if you’re watching a comedy or thriller. The part where Lizzie is bitten by a bat (played by some fur and wire) is silly not scary. As opposed to a scene where Dr. Wells is experimenting with rabies cures and is trying to get some bat saliva on a microscope slide. There’s a real bat there and he’s so little and cute and I was more anxious for that little guy on set then I was for all of the characters in the film.

As another man from the bank is put on trial for the embezzlement and Van Gorder plans to use her author insight to help prove his innocence, especially since the man’s wife and her friend are fans of her books. In exchange for helping with the investigation, she hires the man’s wife as her secretary so she can write everything down as a story. Love the multitasking!

From there, the usual murder mystery fodder ensues. Despite the Lt. of the police protecting them, murders happen and the mysterious pasts of Van Gorder’s butler and new housekeeper are revealed. I won’t give away who done it, but I’m sure the author made a better tale of it. The end of the movie is told from her point of view as she finishes the book.

I am going to point out that if you look for this movie, it’s easy find streaming. However, it might not be easy to watch. It’s in the public domain so any copy you find is painfully difficult to look at, especially if you own a giant HD TV. If you’re lucky, you’ll find a transfer like I did that just makes the B-movie look like a long episode of the “Twilight Zone”. Although, the sound went out of sync for about 10 minutes. That did not make the movie easier to watch.

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Leave Her to Heaven: Movies about Writing

I’ve never read the book this 1945 film is based on, but I bet it’s even a little more sinister since books didn’t have to follow the movie censorship code.

This is another one about muses and obsession, but it’s also about finding happiness and trying to overcome something that was not well understood in the 40s.

So strap in in for Daddy issues meets fiction writing and warning SPOILERS BE AHEAD!!!

Writer Richard Harland (Cornel Wilde) has just been released after 2 years in prison. His friend and lawyer, Glen (Ray Collins) recalls the tragedy that landed a once famed citizen in the slammer. It started when Harlan met Ellen (Gene Tierney) on a trip to New Mexico. Glen introduces Richard to Ellen’s family who are made up of her mother, younger siblings, and a cousin Ruth (Jeanne Crain) raised along Ellen in a strange and strained sisterhood.

Richard is instantly taken with Ellen’s beauty, poise, and how she manages to insult his work not realizing he was the author. And Ellen is fascinated by his resemblance to her beloved and recently departed father. She starts to analyze him based on his novels. “Every book is a confession, my father used to say.” However, he is so swept up in falling in love with Ellen, he sees beyond her unhealthy obsession with her late dad and all of the warnings others in the house try to hint at about her personality. Oh, what a complex Electra she is.

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Ellen breaks her engagement with Russell Quinton, a politically minded go-getter who admits he will always be in love with her even when she announces that she’s marrying Richard. Russell is played by Vincent Price, my favorite character actor! If you come to my house you can see my Vincent Price fancy bluray sets, Funko Pops, doll dressed as Dr. Craven from The Raven, and a photo of him choking Alfred Hitchcock. Despite his popularity in horror films, Price used to be a fantastic and debonair “other man” in movies, but my favorites of these are the three he me made with Gene Tierney - Dragonwyck, Laura, and this one. Marathon them, I tell you! Marathon them now! Okay, maybe finish reading this blog first.

After they are married, Richard wants his invalid teenage brother to come live with them and although Ellen has a fondness for Danny, she’s determined to keep the house just between her and Richard. She won’t even hire help for the house, stating that she wants to do it all herself, including helping “Dick” in his writing (mostly because helping him in his writing still puts attention on her). She even suggests that he give up writing and live off her allowance so they can be together all of the time. Dick laughs off the suggestion born of the lovey-dovey early phase of their relationship. They visit Danny and Dick’s family cabin “Back of the Moon” in Maine, bring in Ruth and Ellen’s mother as a surprise. Ellen hates the surprise, especially as Ruth shows more interest in Dick’s writing, and is only somewhat happy when her mother and Ruth leave again, and starts to resent Danny being there on what would be essentially her Honeymoon. Instead of telling Dick this as he’s trying to meet the deadline for his new novel, she quietly lets the feelings fester into a dark anger that leads to tragedy.

After Danny’s Death, Dick and Ellen move back in with Ellen’s mother and Ruth and Dick stops writing for a while due to depression. Only the announcement of a baby bring Dick out of his despair, leading to him and Ruth happily planning for the bundle while the pregnant Ellen scours and pouts, throwing tantrums when they turn her father’s lab into a playroom and growing jealous of the the time her sister gets to spend with Dick while she’s bedridden. Feeling Richard’s love for her slipping away, Ellen purposely loses the baby and going into a spiral of jealousy when she discovers that his latest book is dedicated to Ruth. By the way, the scene where she plans to “accidentally” miscarry proves why Dick was so attracted to her. She is a character out of a novel, all drama and pageantry. She dresses in her best nightgown and makes herself look gorgeous before throwing herself down the stairs. A part of me watches that scene and thinks, “Well she just ruined that nightgown. She’ll never get the blood out of that blue silk.” Maybe my priorities are out of whack, but it was a really pretty outfit.

I’m not going to give away the complete ending, but I will tell you there is a death, a trial, and Vincent Price. Understand that is a story of an author who thinks he marrying the muse he always wanted. Instead, her obsession and passion for him hinders his writing and ruins his life. She interrupts him, takes away all other happiness that is not her, and hates the long hours writing a book takes. Where as in Ruth, he finds a collaborator and friend, despite Ruth being the practical and quiet of the pair of adoptive sisters. Where he thought happiness came from living with an exciting mysterious woman like a character in his books,

Second spoiler alert: The author gets his happy ending, but that’s a part of it. He gets to be happy. He doesn’t HAVE to be a tortured writer to be good.

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