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Sherlock Holmes


Directed by: Guy Ritchie
Starring: Robert Downey Jr.
Genre:
Action-Adventure
Run Time: 128
min.
Release Date:
December 2009
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
There aren’t many movies around that dare to reinvent something both
literary and cinematic that is beloved by readers and movie-goers alike,
but action director Guy Ritchie has dared in a big way ...and succeeded
beyond my expectations.
When Sir Arthur Conan Doyle created Sherlock Holmes (A Study in
Scarlet, 1887), he made Holmes a roughshod, drug-addled genius with keen
deductive powers. This made him a person that lay-readers could identify
with. A man with problems, but with unique abilities that were much in
demand. Coming off the heels of the Victorian era, too, Holmes was – in
a very real way – a person coming out of that stuffy time period and
into the more loose and modern one. Again, something readers of the time
could identify with.
Although the books live on in perpetuity, most of the population over
the age of 40 are probably more familiar with director Roy Neill’s
television series starring the estimable Basil Rathbone as Sherlock
Holmes and Nigel Bruce as Dr. Watson (if you’re under 40 you’re probably
hooked on the hit TV series
HOUSE M.D. which has more than just a
passing familiarity with Doyle’s character). Basil recreated the
character of Holmes and also cleaned him up quite a bit. No drugs. Clean
shaven. A real gentleman. In Doyle’s literary works, however, this is
far from the case ... which brings us to this new manifestation: the
2009 cinematic work starring Robert Downey Jr. (TROPIC THUNDER) as
Holmes and Jude Law (REPO MEN) as Watson.
Downey Jr. is one of our great new actors. He is a chameleon in every
sense of the word. Which is why I found his Holmes to be extremely well
played. From his migraines to drugging Watson’s beloved dog, Downey Jr.
truly encompassed everything that Doyle wrote about. He’s both brilliant
and prone to folly; seeks a new case that’s semi-interesting but is just
as likely to seek out a new drug to make him feel more interested; and
only has eyes for one woman, the lovely Irene Adler (Rachel McAdams,
THE
FAMILY STONE) who is just as much trouble as any drug or migraine.
This film is, hopefully, a reawakening of the Sherlock Holmes
mystique; but a reawakening with Doyle’s truly flawed character and not
some scrubbed clean version. The ending of this movie certainly leaves
open the possibility of a sequel. Let’s hope that happens.
One final word of warning in case you didn’t get what I was saying:
this isn’t your grandmas Sherlock Holmes. If you want Rathbone, go watch
him. If you want Doyle’s Holmes, check out Guy Ritchie’s newest (and
more accurate) interpretation.
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Image from Sherlock Holmes

DVD cost: $24.99
Purchase:
Tower.com (Blu-Ray)
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
Watson's line to Holmes,
"You know that what you're drinking is for eye surgery," is an obscure
reference to Holmes's cocaine usage. At the time, cocaine was used as a
topical anesthetic for eye surgery. In the stories, Holmes injects
cocaine.
Movie Quote: "I'm
not complaining. How am I complaining? When have do I ever complain
about you practicing the violin at three in the morning, or your mess,
your general lack of hygiene, or the fact that you steal my clothes?"
Other Actors/Actresses
from Sherlock Holmes
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