"The Return of Sherlock Holmes" The Bruce Partington Plans (TV Episode 1988) Poster

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9/10
Great episode
TheLittleSongbird23 June 2011
As people may well know by now, I am a big fan of the Granada Sherlock Holmes series. As far as the episodes in The Return of Sherlock Holmes go, I still think The Devil's Foot is the standout of this particular series, but The Bruce-Partington Plans is one of those episodes that shows why I love the series as much as I do.

The pace is mostly solid, if dragging a tad once or twice. That said, the story is an interesting and well-told one, and is further helped by the thoughtful dialogue, the meticulous production values(one of the series' best assets), the wonderful music and the top notch acting of Jeremy Brett, Edward Hardwicke and Charles Gray.

All in all, a great episode. 9/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
The Bruce Partington Plans
Prismark106 November 2019
I recall looking forward to this episode. It would feature Charles Gray as Mycroft Holmes. I remember the character being played by Christopher Lee in The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes.

The episode begins with a bored Holmes, lamenting on the lack of crime in London. Mycroft calls on his brother on a matter of national importance. Confidential designs on a secret submarine project have gone missing. A government clerk, Cadogan West has been found dead. He is the likely suspect for the theft. His body was found next to the railway line with some pages of the plans on his body.

Holmes needs to visit all the people who had the keys to the safe where the plans were stored. One of whom has subsequently died before Holmes can get to talk to him.

Of course Holmes soon realises that there is more to this theft as it points towards international espionage. The clerk it seems was killed elsewhere and his body placed on the railway.

This is a more thoughtful case and it needs more deductions from Holmes. It also involves Holmes breaking and entering. Gray was an imposing Mycroft and would go on to appear a few more times as Mycroft, mainly as cover for an ill Jeremy Brett.
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9/10
Excellent adaptation, Jupiter is descending.
Sleepin_Dragon14 May 2018
The Bruce Partington plans is another great episode from a top notch series, the story itself isn't particularly deep or complex, it is simply a case of find the missing papers, but it is hugely absorbing, beautifully acted, and superbly produced.

The appearance of Mycroft always elevates an episode, Charles Gray a fantastic performer, who seemed to inspire Brett. There's a great scene where Mycroft dismisses Holmes vocation as something minor, almost pointless, but of course Sherlock has the last laugh.

The episode is fast paced, energetic, edgy and has an energy to it that wasn't evident in the last few episodes. Not the standard of The Devil's Foot (What is though?) but certainly better then Silver Blaze and Wysteria Lodge.

Excellent. 9/10
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8/10
Another fine mystery with international implications
ericksonsam6027 March 2014
This is yet another "missing important document" mystery just like "The Naval Treaty" and "The Second Stain" but it is still very well done. This time it features Holmes's older, wiser brother Mycroft as he presents Sherlock with a case involving missing naval documents called "The Bruce Partington Plans" that were taken from a man who died coming off of a moving train. Everything in the story comes together nicely and the explanation as to how the man was killed from the train is as Watson states "a masterpiece." The pacing is very good and the production values are superb. As usual Brett and Hardwicke delight as Holmes and Watson and Charles Gray is wonderful as the man that Holmes's often refers to as "Brother Mine." Fun Fact: BBC's "Sherlock" did a modern twist on this story in the episode called "The Great Game."
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9/10
More Stolen Papers
Hitchcoc12 February 2014
A very nice episode, certainly. Conan Doyle seemed to get caught up on some plot elements, however. From "Scandal in Bohemia" to the present effort, we have people who have either carelessly or through victimization, lost some sort of item of worth, be it a photograph, a set of blueprints, or a letter, Holmes spends a goodly amount of time trying to recover these things. Of course, in most situations, there have been other crimes committed, even murder. Often the fate of the world hangs in the balance, as in the "Bruce Partington Plans. A body has been found by a railroad track with three pages of a major plan to build a submarine in his pocket. What is interesting is that he apparently didn't die in this setting but was moved there. This leads Holmes and Watson to deal with two things: recovering the document and figuring out what happened to this man. It's all about location and opportunity. This is a very well done mystery with lots of twists and turns and a not-so-simple solution.
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9/10
Sherlock Holmes, Spy Hunter
grantss14 December 2022
Sherlock Holmes is urgently contacted by his brother Mycroft. Top secret submarine plans have been stolen and the man believed responsible, Cadogan West, found dead on a train track with some of the plans on his person. The most important parts of the plans of the plans are still missing. Mycroft needs Sherlock to find the missing plans before they land in the hands of a foreign power.

An interesting, intriguing mystery. A tale of espionage, murder and honour.

As always, Jeremy Brett is excellent as Sherlock Holmes and Edward Harwicke is great as Dr Watson. Good to see Charles Gray back as Mycroft. It's a pity he only appears in two Holmes episodes: he and Sherlock make a great combination and it's wonderful to think that there's someone Sherlock regards as more intelligent than himself.
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10/10
Holmes Sweet Holmes
aramis-112-80488022 October 2022
A young copyist is found dead beside the railway lines on the Underground with a massive head wound but little bleeding. He has no ticket but he does have plans for the Bruce-Partington submarine in his pocket. Is he a traitor? How did he board the train without a ticket? Who killed him and why, or was it an accident?

It's well that "The Bruce Partington Plans" is the finale of "The Return of Sherlock Holmes," which has such fine episodes as "The Man With The Twisted Lip," "The Abbe Grange" and "The Second Stain." And Freddie Jones' delightful performance in the otherwise lackluster "Wisteria Lodge." It's a worthy climax.

Brett by this time has developed that delivery problem that makes him sound like he suffers from a perpetual head cold, but it's not eggregious here.

The episode opens with the reintroduction of Charles Gray as Mycroft. I was never sold on Gray's Mycroft; Gray's been too common in movies and TV to be definitive in the way Brett, Burke, Hardwicke and Jeavons are. But he and Brett seem to enjoy acting together, which gives them that glow of brothers who aren't terribly close but who are always glad to see each other.

The story is one if Holmes' triumphs of detection. It's a bit of a shame Lestrade couldn't join us; no doubt Jeavons' schedule precluded it. Amanda Waring is affecting and she does her best with lines like, "if you could only save his honor," which rings so hollow in a more cynical age where honor is treated as a joke.

They do a good job to keep anyone who hasn't read the story guessing at the culprit, making even the ticket-seller at the station a suspicious character.

This is one of those Brett/Holmes stories so delicious one doesn't need to go back to ACD to enjoy it as it should be enjoyed. It's good (enough) as an adaptation and it stands up alone on its own merits.

BTW, the story contains one of ACD's greatest howlers, where Mycroft says the submarine is one of Britain's most closely guarded secrets but then is astounded his brother hasn't heard of it. But his brother is Sherlock Holmes the omniscient. My brother wasn't even Lestrade.

Apart from that, this is a beautiful story beautifully told, unlike some of the travesties like "The Six Napoleons," which should have been left untampered with (though, to be fair, tampering with "The Priory School" improved it).
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7/10
Good Episode.
rmax3048232 August 2012
Warning: Spoilers
I admire it when the musical score by Patrick Gowers goes out of its way to execute variations on the mysterious violin theme that opens each episode. The variations under the end credits can sometimes get very tricky too and almost mask the theme itself. In this case, the last scene takes place in the dining room of a hotel patronized by the international set, and Gowers gives us an elegant waltz played on a flute. Nicely done, as usual.

Others might feel differently but I don't find the stories of missing papers or letters as interesting, generally, as stories involving murders. In this case, we have both missing papers and a bashed-in head. It's like finding a chocolate on your hotel room pillow.

The missing papers are the plans for the Bruce-Partingon submarine. The dead body belongs to a minor clerk in the foreign office or whatever it is who was found with some, but not all, of the plans tucked away in his pocket. The corpse is found next to the railway tracks but how did it get there? Among the effects, no tickets are found. There was no blood in any of the train's compartments. And of course no one noticed anything unusual going on.

Then, too, how did that mousy clerk get the plans in the first place. Whoever took them from the safe needed three keys and must have known what to look for, yet the clerk had not been issued any keys and may have been ignorant of the papers' importance. Circumstances get still more puzzling and the story more intricate when the head of the foreign office, the clerk's boss, drops dead of a heart attack.

The acting is up to par with no one standing out. Holmes pulls off no dazzling stunts of deduction. He does, however, commit a crime -- breaking and entering, along with his friend Watson. This incurs the ire and envy of Inspector Bradstreet who mutters darkly about its being no wonder that Holmes is so successful in solving his cases and adds that, "Some day you will go too far." Watson is uncomfortable but Holmes pays no attention.

Nice scene: When they visit the home of the head of the foreign office they are met by the dead man's brother who ushers them into a room that appears to be a library -- only it seems that all the impressive shelves of books on the walls are fake. One of the walls itself, showing dozens of phony volumes, is a door.
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Diogenes
tedg15 June 2006
I'm interested in Holmes because he changed the nature of narrative, a revolution every bit as significant as the invention of human rights. I'm interested as well because he reflects an odd battle we haven't settled and probably won't: the battle between those who believe in the supernatural and the other extreme, that all behavior and especially human behavior is rational. Its a fascinating war that we all see ourselves in somehow.

And I'm interested in Holmes because it is almost a perfect textbook case of the challenges of mapping the core notions of the literary to the cinematic. Well, other authors would be more interesting, but this one is so well known...

But I don't find the stories themselves that much fun. The much advertised Holmes method of deduction is often tossed and we have disguises, what today would be called footwork by the Baker Street irregulars, and traps. (This story has more actual deduction than most.) Of all the Holmes stories, the one feature that I love is the usually invisible brother, Mycroft. He's seven years senior and very much Holmes' superior in logic. He's as far from Holmes in talent as Holmes is from Watson, our designated ordinary man. He's obese and never leaves his comfortable chair at the Diogenes Club, where he entertains a stream of needy supplicants including his brother. Imagine Orson Welles.

He's an amazing character. He's in this story. He's not impressive or interesting here.

Ted's Evaluation -- 1 of 3: You can find something better to do with this part of your life.
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