Film Review
The ninth entry in Universal's series of Sherlock Holmes films sees the
famous sleuth once more crossing swords with his nemesis Professor
Moriarty, who was last seen falling to his death in
Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon
(1943). Again, Moriarty has not only miraculously survived but
has changed his appearance, this time adopting the guise of Henry
Daniell, a distinguished character actor with an impressive series of
screen credits, including a supporting role in Chaplin's
The Great Dictator
(1940). Daniell had appeared in two of the earlier films in the
series:
Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror
(1942) and
Sherlock Holmes in Washington
(1943). With his icy cold persona and subtle mortician's menace,
Daniell makes a superb Moriarty, and a worthy opponent to Basil
Rathbone's charismatic Holmes.
The beginning of
The Woman in Green
differs markedly from that of the other films in the series, using a
voice-over narration to set the scene, in much the manner of a classic
American film noir. The tone is much darker than in the preceding
films, with a chilling sense of the macabre. This mood is
sustained for a good ten minutes or so, helped by the delayed entry of
Nigel Bruce's idiotic Dr Watson and the replacement of the buffoonish
Inspector Lestrade by the more sober Inspector Gregson.
Unfortunately, the film then soon reverts to the style of the others in
the series, with Watson called upon to provide comic relief.
Whilst the film's plot is an original story, it weaves in elements of
two original Sherlock Holmes stories by Arthur Conan Doyle:
The Final Problem and
The Empty House, even appropriating
some of Doyle's memorable dialogue. The screenplay was written by
Bertram Millhauser, the last he contributed to the series, and was
originally intended to be a much darker work, involving the murder of
young children, with a suggestion of paedophilia. The Hollywood
censors weren't going to allow that and insisted on changes to the
screenplay. Another thing the in-house censors objected to was
the sequence where Watson, under hypnosis, was requested to drop his
trousers. In the revised version, Watson merely has to take off
one of his shoes and a sock.
The Woman in Green offers some
excellent performances and includes some of the best scenes in the
Universal series of Sherlock Holmes films, notably the sequence where
Holmes is apparently hypnotised. However, it is hampered by an
unconvincing storyline that is riddled with unnecessary plot
contrivances and marred by a somewhat botched denouement. Hillary
Brooke makes a stunning femme fatale but her contribution is eclipsed,
unfairly, by Daniell's presence as Moriarty. Although the film
has its flaws, it is stylishly shot, with unusual camera angles that
suggest deceit and heighten the tension. It may not be perfect
but
The Woman in Green is
just as enjoyable as the other films in the series, thanks mainly to
the cosy rapport between Basil Rathbone's Holmes and Nigel Bruce's
Watson.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Roy William Neill film:
Dressed to Kill (1946)