Film Review
Billy Wilder's
The Private Life of
Sherlock Holmes may not have been a great commercial success
when it was first released in 1970, and it may not have found favour
with all the critics, but it now enjoys the status of a cult classic
and is assuredly one of the most elegant and enjoyable of cinema's many
takes on the exploits of Arthur Conan Doyle's famous Victorian
detective. Despite being heavily trimmed on its first release
(removing two self-contained stories), the film is as slick and
polished as any other Wilder production, and the dialogue (written by
Wilder and his long-time collaborator Izzy Diamond) positively crackles
with wit and mischievousness. If the film does slightly send-up
Doyle's creation, it does so in an affectionate and courteous manner,
and manages to be much closer in spirit and mood to the original
Sherlock Holmes stories than the Universal films featuring Basil
Rathbone in the 1940s.
The casting is, for want of a better word, imaginative. Robert
Stephens, an accomplished actor of the English stage, is hardly the
obvious choice to play Holmes but he brings a vigour and subtlety to
the part that is seldom surpassed by the better known incumbents of the
role. There is a gentle campness to Stephens' humane portrayal of
Holmes which is perfectly in keeping with the light-hearted tone of the
film, but this does not detract from the complexity and tragic
dimension of the character. Watson is equally well interpreted by
Colin Blakely, who, in contrast to the amiable buffoon portrayed by
Nigel Bruce in the Universal films, is not merely included for comic
relief but quickly establishes that he is worthy companion to Holmes, a
helpmate and guardian angel (and occasional buffoon).
Geneviève Page is at her most ravishing as the enigmatic leading
lady who somehow manages to arouse Holmes' seldom glimpsed romantic
side whilst retaining an air of mystery that is as cool and
impenetrable as London fog. The handsome supporting cast includes
Christopher Lee, superb as Holmes' cold-hearted brother
(who gets a marvellous dressing down from a decidely unamused Queen Victoria),
Stanley Holloway as a chirpy gravedigger and Irene Handl as possibly
the greatest Mrs Hudson of them all.
As you would expect of a Billy Wilder film, the production standards on
The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes
are excellent. No Hammer-style penny pinching on evidence here,
or embarrassing use of clunky back-projection. The sets and
costumes are meticulously authentic, the photography (particularly that
of the picturesque Scottish location) is stunning throughout, making
this one of Wilder's most beautifully presented films.
Miklós Rózsa contributes an attractive score which adds
greatly to the mood of the film, lifting it when the narrative pace
occasionally shows signs of flagging. The only area where the
film is less than perfect is its far from elementary plot, which is so
convoluted and intricate that is a real test of concentration to keep
up with it. Stop paying attention for one minute and you'll end
up like poor Dr Watson at the end of the film, confused and slightly
out of it. Fortunately, thanks to the modern miracle of DVD, we
can now go back and watch it again, and thereby gain a little more
appreciation for a film that has for too long been considered one of
Wilder's lesser works.
The
Private Life of Sherlock Holmes is an absolute delight, the
kindest and wittiest parody any fictional detective could hope for.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Billy Wilder film:
Mauvaise graine (1934)
Film Synopsis
Sherlock Holmes is at a loose end when he is summoned to the ballet to
attend a performance of Swan Lake with his friend and colleague Dr
Watson. Madame Petrova, Russia's leading ballerina, tells Holmes
that she intends to retire from her profession and offers him an
expensive violin if he will agree to father her child, in the hope that
it will inherit his brains. Holmes declines, insisting that he
has no interest in women, hinting that his relationship with Watson is
more than it appears. A short while later, Holmes is visited by
an attractive Belgian woman who is visibly distressed and suffering
from amnesia. The woman, Gabrielle Valladon, recalls that she was
in London, looking for her engineer husband, when she was attacked and
thrown into the river. Intrigued, Holmes begins his investigation
but is soon warned off by his brother Mycroft. Undeterred,
Holmes and Watson accompany Gabrielle to Scotland where they happen
across a funeral in which Gabrielle's husband is buried along side two
dwarfs. The gravedigger reveals that the three corpses were
fished out of Loch Ness and he is convinced that before they died they
had a close encounter with the legendary monster. Just when he is
on the point of resolving the mystery Holmes runs up against his
brother a second time, and realises that he is about to make the
blunder of his career, all because of a woman...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.