In the mid-17th century in New England a wretched Pyncheon ancestor stole the home, the Seven Gables, from carpenter Matthew Maule by accusing him of practicing witchcraft. Before Maule was executed, he put a curse on the house. In 1828, in Salem, Ma., upstart lawyer Jaffray Pynchon (George Sanders) is upset that his bankrupt father Gerald (Gilbert Emery) plans to sell the Seven Gables to keep solvent. When his father dies from a heart attack the bitter Jaffray, upset that his musical composer brother Clifford (Vincent Price) wants to sell the house, falsely accuses his brother of patricide and gets him convicted to serve a life sentence on false circumstantial evidence. But his father changed the will and leaves the house instead of to his oldest son to their cousin Hepzibah Pynchon (Margaret Lindsay), the fiancée of his brother Clifford. After Hepzibah gives Jaffray the boot, she pays off the debts with the insurance money received from Gerald’s death and lives miserably alone in the house waiting for the release of her innocent would-be husband Clifford.
After twenty years pass, the governor allows Clifford to leave jail in order to prove his innocence. Clifford on his return home to Seven Gables finds a worn-out and embittered old maid Hepzibah living in near poverty in the run down place. Also living there is Hepzibah’s radiant cousin Phoebe Pynchon (Nan Grey), who helps run from the house a cent store. There’s also a mysterious boarder photographer who uses an alias, but is really Matthew Maule (Dick Foran), an Abolitionist who befriended Clifford when he was placed in the same cell when jailed for his radical activities.
The evil Jaffray now schemes to get his brother incarcerated in an insane asylum because of rumors reported in the newspapers that Clifford plans to tear down the house looking for secret passages that have hidden gold. Clifford has schemed with Matthew to get the avaricious Jaffray, now a wealthy judge, to fall for that lie and show his hand as someone capable of foul deeds to advance his nefarious purposes. Surprisingly trouble brews for Jaffray because he betrayed the Abolitionist treasurer Deacon Foster (Miles Mander) by investing the money collected by the Abolitionists, without the Deacon’s knowledge, in a slave trade ship. Jaffray now can’t pay it back when the Abolitionists demand the money immediately to use for a runaway slave. —Ozu’s World of Movie Reviews
Joe May (November 7, 1880, in Vienna – April 29, 1954, in Hollywood), born Julius Otto Mandl, was a film director and film producer born in Austria and one of the pioneers of German cinema.
After studying in Berlin and a variety of odd jobs, he began his career as a stage director of operettas in Hamburg before starting to make films from 1912 in Berlin. In 1902 he had married the actress Mia May (born Hermine Pfleger) and took his stage name from hers.
In 1914 he founded his own film production company, May-Film, and began to produce a successful series of crime films, whose detective hero went by the name of Joe Deebs. Some of these were directed by May himself, others by Harry Piel. (Around the same time May also worked on the Stuart Webbs series of detective films for another company). In 1917 he gave Fritz Lang one of his earliest breaks in the film industry as screenwriter on the film Die Hochzeit im Excentricclub (Wedding in the Eccentric Club) and Lang also worked… read more