THE LOVES OF EDGAR ALLAN POE-1942-Eddie
Poe (John Sheppard; later known as Sheppard Strudwick) is taken in by
The Allens after his mother dies. Mrs. Allen (Mary Howard) is a nice
caring woman who loves him but Mr. Allan (Frank Conroy) is a jerk who
thinks Edgar is wasting his time writing poems. At school he gambles,
gets into debt and drinks a lot. He gets some encouragement from
Thomas Jefferson (Gilbert Emery) but Mr. Allen hits the roof when he
sees all of Eddie's debts. He also loses his love Elmira (Virginia
Gilmore) to another man (but later it is reveal to be a deception
devised by his old man). He joins the cavalry and later West Point
(and gets thrown out) and goes to live with his aunt (Jane Darwell)
in Baltimore where he meets his cousin Virginia (top billed Linda
Darnell). He becomes a writer and wins a short story contest. He and
Virginia get married and he lands a job as a magazine editor in
Richmond but complications arrive when he meets Elmira at a party. He
goes on a bender and gets fired for being drunk. The trio go to
Philadelphia where he becomes a success and meets Charles Dickens. He
works toward a getting a copyright law for writers, gets into an
argument with his boss (Morris Ankrum), gets drunk and goes to NYC.
Virginia gets sick. He tries hard to sell his new poem “The Raven”
to the public and even gives a great reading of it to some printers
but fails to sell it. Virginia dies and he goes back to Baltimore to
die in poverty. A narrator explains that although it was not
recognized in his own life time now “The gods laugh and Poe laughs
with them”. Harry Morgan plays his friend Ebenezer.
This is a straight forward fairly accurate portrait of the now legendary poet/writer which provides a lot of sympathy for the main character. Director Harry Lachman had an interesting career although he quit making movies in 1942 the year LOVES was released (he also made DR. RENAULT'S SECRET the same year which featured Sheppard). He made many in the Charlie Chan series and OUR RELATIONS with Laurel & Hardy. It was written and produced by Bryan Foy (THE UNDYING MONSTER, PT 109).
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