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28 out of 30 people found the following review useful:
The Crown Jewels, 6 October 2002
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Author:
telegonus from brighton, ma
Released in the landmark movie year of 1939, this is my favorite Sherlock Holmes film. It is set in the proper period, has a reasonable budget, excellent sets, and fog so thick one would have to cut it with a razor. The story has to do with Professor Moriarity's scheme to steal the crown jewels. More than anything, however, the movie is a vehicle for Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce, whose interpretations of Holmes and Watson are so engaging and larger than life that several decades later actors are still compared (usually unfavorably) to these two whenever they attempt to take on these roles. Rathbone makes an impressive Holmes,--cunning, gentlemanly, high-minded, somewhat competitive, intensely focused. One of the many things that makes Rathbone so perfect as Holmes is that while he may fall short of the mark in his portrayal of the character Conan Doyle created in print, he is an ideal movie Holmes. There's an heroic quality to him. Rathbone was more than a bit of a swashbuckler on screen, as is obvious in his many duels with Flynn and Power, and he brought some of this edgy, assertive quality to his interpretation of Holmes, and as is so often the case when an actor varies somewhat from a character created in fiction (Bogart is a far cry from Hammett's "blonde Satan" of a Sam Spade), this can actually work in his favor. Rathbone is Hollywood's Sherlock Holmes, and I can't imagine a better one. Bruce often played Watson as a bumbler later in the series, but in the early entries was more serious and competent. His movie Watson is overall somewhat comical, and creates a charming contrast to the grim, determined Holmes, and works for me because I like a little respite from the seriousness of a mystery, any mystery, since the genre is melodramatic, and hard to take when it gets too heavy. With Bruce on hand it never does.
27 out of 29 people found the following review useful:
Classy Crime Caper, 25 July 2004
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Author:
Ron Oliver (revilorest@juno.com) from Forest Ranch, CA
THE ADVENTURES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES takes him into deadly conflict with
Britain's most dangerous criminal mastermind, Professor Moriarty.
20th Century Fox takes us back to the foggy London streets of 1894 in
these exciting exploits of the world's most famous private consulting
detective. The production values are of a high order in this story
based on William Gillette's stage play about Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's
celebrated characters. Basil Rathbone & Nigel Bruce return as Holmes
and Watson, perfectly portraying that legendary literary partnership
with good grace and cheerfulness, Rathbone allowing some traces of
humanity to infuse Holmes' cerebral haughtiness, and Bruce, bumbling
and big-hearted, enacting the embodiment of a staunch companion and
friend.
Unfairly relegated to 6th place billing is George Zucco, marvelous as
Moriarty. He presents us with a consummate villain of enormous
intellect & subtle nuance, a monster passionate about his exotic plants
but indifferent to human life. It is highly enjoyable watching him plot
a dastardly crime while engaging in a masterful duel of wits with
Holmes.
The other roles are also very well cast and highlight some fine British
character actors: lovely Ida Lupino as a young woman frantic over an
unknown evil stalking her family; handsome Alan Marshal as her family's
lawyer; dignified Henry Stephenson as the worried Constable of the
Tower of London; E.E. Clive as the dogged Scotland Yard inspector; and
Mary Forbes as a kindly noblewoman who befriends Miss Lupino.
Some rather brief performances also enhance the whole: Mary Gordon as
Holmes' grandmotherly landlady and young Terry Kilburn as his page boy;
Peter Willes as Miss Lupino's terrified brother; elderly Frank Dawson
as Moriarty's harassed butler; Holmes Herbert as a highly frustrated
Law Court Justice; and William Austin as a stranger who has a peculiar
encounter with Watson on a London sidewalk.
Two lighthearted moments especially standout -- Rathbone delightfully
in disguise, and, at the very conclusion of the film, Watson deftly
turning the tables on Holmes.
This was the second in a series of Holmes films starring Rathbone &
Bruce which began at Fox Studios. It followed THE HOUND OF THE
BASKERVILLES (1939) and, after the jump to Universal Studios, preceded
SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE VOICE OF TERROR (1942) three years later.
19 out of 20 people found the following review useful:
Superb version of the stage play...excellent performances by Rathbone, Bruce and Lupino..., 13 April 2001
Author:
Neil Doyle from U.S.A.
Having recently completed a film article due for publication in FILMS OF THE GOLDEN AGE on Ida Lupino, it's a pleasure to report that this is one of her best early performances. She plays a terrified young woman who seeks the help of Sherlock Holmes when she becomes concerned about her brother's safety. He soon determines that she too is being stalked by killers. Her brother is killed and the plot thickens with a sub-plot involving Professor Moriarty's plans to steal the Crown Jewels and the Star of Delhi. Holmes eventually solves the case and defeats the diabolical Moriarty with a plan of his own. Reviewers judged this film even superior to the earlier 'Hound of the Baskervilles'. Indeed, it's fully as atmospheric and suspenseful with handsomely staged scenes in gas-lit Victorian London. George Zucco makes an ideal villain and the main roles by Rathbone, Nigel Bruce and Ida Lupino are handled with their customary skill. Definitely worth seeing and far superior to the later Universal entries which updated all of the Holmes stories.
15 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
What a Diabolical Villain George was!, 16 April 2004
Author:
theowinthrop from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Basil Rathbone is said to have had one regret. He wanted to play Rhett
Butler in Gone With The Wind, and had the support of the novelist
Margaret Mitchell who wanted him too. Fortunately David O. Selznick
chose Clark Gable, the only Hollywood star who could (in it's last
twenty minutes) play Rhett as a broken-hearted King. Rathbone, with his
sharp and handsome features, could personify thought and brains but not
spirit and heart. The right man got to play Rhett. But to make it up to
Rathbone, Selznick gave him the role which gave that splendid character
actor immortality - Sherlock Holmes. First in THE HOUND OF THE
BASKERVILLES, and then in this film. Rathbone (in his memoires, IN AND
OUT OF CHARACTER) dismisses Holmes, saying that he disliked the
typecasting. Yet he played in fourteen films (which are still revived)
as well as a radio series with his friend and partner Nigel Bruce, and
even was willing to go on the stage with Bruce (and Thomas Gomez as
Professor Moriarty). Typecasting perhaps, but successful for all that.
The first two films are the only ones that occur Victorian England (the
right period for Holmes). This one is aided by a somewhat intelligent
Watson (witness the running gag about Holmes experimenting with his
violin to see if he can kill flies by vibrations - only at the
conclusion to have Watson cut to the chase by using a rolled up
newspaper, and trumping Holmes's "Astonishing, My Dear Watson", with
"Elimentary, My Dear Holmes."). But Watson's offer of his help to the
Superintendent of Scotland Yard (Henry Stephenson) results in a type of
snicker from that fine actor. Ida Lupino is good in her role, torn
between her love for a questionable solicitor (who is dealing with
Moriarty) and her suspicions about her lover's involvement in her
brother's death (by a bolo).
Above all is George Zucco, as Moriarty. He is not the only villain
actor to play the role in the Holmes series. Lionel Atwill played the
Professor in SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE SECRET WEAPON, and Henry Daniell
played the Professor in THE WOMAN IN GREEN. Rathbone always felt that
Daniell gave the best of the three performances, but it's Zucco's
performance that sticks out. He looks professorial with his heavy beard
and bald head and glasses (actually, whether intentionally or not, he
looks a bit like the real Victorian poisoner Dr. Thomas Neill Cream).
But his performance while controlled has shafts of vicious light in it.
Witness the scene when he is being shaved by his valet - and taunts the
man for being a coward: he can cut the Professor's throat but doesn't
dare to because he knows what would happen to him and his family due to
Moriarty's posthumous instructions. Despite the fact the valet has that
sharp weapon in his hand, the scene shows all too clearly who has the
whip hand. It is a wonderful performance.
18 out of 26 people found the following review useful:
DVD Improved The Atmosphere, Story, 20 November 2006
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Author:
ccthemovieman-1 from United States
Some national critics rated this the best of the old Sherlock Holmes
films. I don't agree with that, but it's a good one. It's also a film I
didn't fully appreciate the first time. On the second look, thanks no
doubt to the wonderful "restoration" job on the DVD, it brought the
cinematography to the forefront and made the whole story more
attractive, too.
There are some wonderful scenes with light and shadows and foggy London
streets. Story-wise, it's okay nothing that memorable except we see a
very young and innocent-looking Ida Lupino playing a nice British girl.
Holmes (Basil Rathbone) is his usual deductive self and Dr. Watson
(Nigel Bruce) elicits a few laughs along the way, not as many as he did
in future films but more than he did in his first Holmes film, "The
Hound Of The Baskervilles."
There weren't as many suspects in this SH adventure as in most of them,
but that was fine with me. It was more a battle of wits between the
good detective and his nemesis, "Dr. Moriarity" (George Zucco), which
is better than having a dozen suspects.
9 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
The Best Sherlock Holmes, 12 July 2006
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Author:
nnnn45089191 from Norway
The follow-up to the the very successful The Hound of the Baskervilles,is even better than its predecessor.Basil Rathbone gives a marvelous performance as the super-sleuth.His performance in disguise as a singer at a party is fantastic.He was totally unrecognizable.Nigel Bruce was as always good as Holmes 's sidekick Dr.Watson.But what elevates this entry in the Holmes-series was the portrayal of George Zucco's Dr.Moriarty,Holmes's nemesis. Moriarty's plot to break his enemy was rather clever.I enjoyed seeing Rathbone really getting in to the persona of Holmes in this one.The movie's short running-time was perhaps my only disappointment.
10 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Good Cast, Atmosphere, & Action, 3 June 2005
Author:
Snow Leopard from Ohio
The cast, atmosphere, & action in this version of "The Adventures of
Sherlock Holmes" are all good reasons why it is an enjoyable feature.
The story is very loosely based on a play that itself had freely
adapted some of Doyle's characters and plot ideas, and thus the plot is
essentially entirely new, yet the Victorian atmosphere and Basil
Rathbone's portrayal of the great detective give it a pretty good
"Holmes" feel.
The basic story idea has Professor Moriarty scheming to exploit one of
Holmes's few weaknesses, and although the plot in itself does not come
from the novels, it is a perceptive way of using the characters. There
are some loose ends in the story that would have been tied together
except for some studio-decreed cuts; the notes that accompany the DVD
release are quite helpful in covering what was omitted.
George Zucco makes fine use of his screen time as Moriarty, and Ida
Lupino makes her character a demure and appealing heroine in distress,
while showing some good spirit at the right times. Nigel Bruce's Watson
has a rather different feel from Doyle's character, but he gets some
good moments of his own here, and Bruce does well with them.
For a great many Sherlock Holmes fans, nothing can now rival the
magnificent Jeremy Brett versions from the 1980s and 1990s, with their
marvelous atmosphere, careful story adaptations, and Brett's
penetrating portrayal of Holmes. But until those were made, Basil
Rathbone's portrayal of the detective was as good as any of the many
actors who had played him. This movie and its predecessor "The Hound of
the Baskervilles" are among the most enjoyable of all of the Rathbone
features, for their atmosphere and their lively stories.
8 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Showdown between Geniuses., 2 January 2006
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Author:
Coventry from the Draconian Swamp of Unholy Souls
Every great hero needs at least one arch enemy that nearly is his equivalent in intellectual faculties and ingenious working methods. For Sherlock Holmes this nemesis is Professor Moriarty and the fact that he appears in this film first, moreover portrayed by the more-than-brilliant cult star George Zucco, makes "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" maybe the single best entry in the long-running Basil Rathbone/Nigel Bruce movie cycle! The sublime interactions between Holmes and Moriarty lift the quality of this film up to an higher level and, for the first time ever, you get the impression that our master detective is up against an opponent who really forces him to use ALL of his intellect for once. Almost purely for the fun of it, Professor Moriarty decides to embarrass Sherlock Holmes and steal the hugely valuable crown jewels right from under his nose. Through well thought out red herrings and distractions, Moriarty manages to confuse Holmes and to mess up his sense for priority, giving him with a perfect opportunity to steal the jewels. This installment is less of a horror film because the emphasis merely lies on the nuanced acting performances as well as on the light-hearted rivalry between Holmes and Watson. The Victorian setting & timing is excellent, and you should enjoy it as much as you can here, because the series got uplifted to the actual 1940's after this, resulting in a lot of redundant wartime propaganda. Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce are splendid as usual, but the show is undeniably stolen by George Zucco in his familiar role of criminal mastermind. Particularly the sadistic yet sophisticated conversations with his butler are pure class. The only elements that slightly disappointed me was the rushed and action-packed ending which stands in contrast with the rest of the patiently scripted story. Nevertheless, highly recommended!
7 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
The most astounding crime of the Nineteenth Century Foxed, 20 March 2005
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Author:
Gary170459 from Derby, UK
The only other in-period Rathbone Holmes film, this is brim full of
atmosphere and high production values, never mind about how good the
acting and direction was too. The many long scenes were taken leisurely
which enabled me to get a real feel for Victorian London with all the
fog outside the Fox set windows. Sadly the one aspect slightly lacking
was the story but only through the comparison to Hound, overall
Adventures is easily the best of the rest and the best Holmes-Moriarty
duel on film.
Rathbone and Zucco souped up the mental jousting and added something
more to the legend, it really was a pity Zucco couldn't do the other
two Moriarty outings at Universal. Although Atwill and Daniell were
both excellent as well - maybe the part couldn't fail as Holmes' foil!
Ida Lupino played her melodramatic part well, she could have smiled at
least once though! Nigel Bruce as faithful Watson was perfect as usual,
at one point even to lying down and rolling over in the gutter for his
... master.
All in all, a notch down from Hound but in quality a long drop down
from this to the Universals, much as I love them too.
7 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Excellent Holmes yarn, 3 June 2005
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Author:
The_Void from Beverley Hills, England
This entry in the Sherlock Holmes series is one of the best and it sees
the great Basil Rathbone reprise his role as the eloquent sleuth,
Sherlock Holmes, once again. This film sees the world's greatest
detective face off against his arch nemesis, Professor Moriarty, who
plans to not only commit the world's greatest crime, but do it right
under the nose of our protagonist. Like most detective dramas, this one
keeps itself alive by offering the audience a constant sense of
intrigue and ensuring that we follow the mystery along with Sherlock
Holmes. The film also benefits from it's central character, who is
always a delight to have on screen before you. Holmes is brought to
life with a confidant and assured persona, and you always get the
impression that he knows exactly what he's doing. His mannerisms are
also a treat, and the way that Holmes uses his spare time to do things
such as play violin to houseflies, is absurdly funny and helps to build
the character into the eccentric and intelligent man that he is.
While a few people, such as Peter Cushing for example, have played
Sherlock Holmes; it will always be Basil Rathbone that will be best
remembered for it. His persona blends exquisitely with that of the
central character, and it makes for a great piece of casting. His
mannerisms and personality are great throughout, and Basil Rathbone was
clearly born for this role. The rest of the casting is good too, with
Nigel Bruce in the role of Watson making the best of it, and also cult
favourite George Zucco, who brings class and sophistication to the role
of Holmes' arch enemy Professor Moriarty. The story itself is strong,
and the two mysteries that run through it combine well together and
both threads are interesting enough to keep the audience entertained
throughout. It's a shame that films like this aren't made any more as
they make for a great slice of entertainment, as we watch a mystery
unravel before our eyes. Still, a lot were made in the 30's and 40's
and I plan to track them all down!
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