Film Review
After the immediate success of
The Hound of the Baskervilles
(1939), Twentieth Century Fox wasted no time in making a follow up,
with Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce reprising the roles of the
legendary crime-fighting duo Holmes and Watson. Released just six
months after the first film,
The
Adventures of Sherlock Holmes was just as popular and Fox may
have continued the series had the outbreak of World War Two not
intervened.
Rathbone and Bruce would continue playing Holmes and Watson
in a popular American radio series,
The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes,
which ran from 1939 to 1946. Their return to the big screen came in
1942, when Universal Pictures resumed the film series, with Holmes and
Watson inexplicably transported fifty years in time to deal with contemporary threats,
partly for wartime propaganda purposes, but also presumably to keep down the production
costs.
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
is one of the most popular films in the Rathbone-Bruce series, even if
the plot is frankly bonkers and has far more overt comedy than is good
for it (for example, Holmes trying to develop a fly repellent with his
violin). Although nominally a B movie, the film has exceptional
production values, offering an impressive recreation of Victorian
London (complete with fog-shrouded streets busy with authentic
horse-drawn cabs) and some stylish chiaroscuro cinematography which is
on a par with that of the best film noir. Note particularly the
use of oblique camera angles to suggest menace and heighten the tension.
As ever, Basil Rathbone excels as the pipe-smoking gentleman sleuth,
capturing the essence of Conan Doyle's creation whilst bringing his own
charm and authority to the part. Nigel Bruce has been the subject
of a great deal of criticism over the decades for his portrayal of
Watson as a bumbling old fool, but his pairing with Rathbone works
remarkably well and the humour he brings effectively counterbalances
the darker elements of the films. If there is just one reason for
watching this film it is to see Rathbone's music hall act, in which a
cleverly disguised Holmes gets to perform a lively rendition of
Oh I Do Like To Be Beside The Seaside.
Somehow you can't imagine Jeremy Brett or Peter Cushing getting away
with that one.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
When Professor Moriarty is acquitted of a murder charge, his
arch-nemesis Sherlock Holmes vows to bring him to book. Moriarty
rises to this challenge by concocting what he believes will be the
crime of the century. Whilst he prepares his master plan, the
villainous professor distracts Holmes with another mystery. When
her brother Lloyd receives a note with a drawing of a man with an
albatross around his neck, Ann Brandon consults Holmes, fearing that
her brother's life may be in danger. Sure enough, a few days
later, Lloyd Brandon is dead, strangled and his head smashed in.
Suspicion falls immediately on the Brandon's family solicitor Jerrold
Hunter, who was found at the scene of the crime with a gun in his
hand. Only a few hours before, Dr Watson saw Hunter in the
company of none other than Professor Moriarty...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.