I prefer this interpretation of Mycroft over all the others. There is no real animosity between the two, just the meeting of two similar minds engaged in a familiar game.
I completely agree! What they did with the character Mycroft in the tv-show Elementary is so so wrong. The missed, in what is otherwise a great tv-show, both the actor and the stories.
Yes. And the BBC completely left behind the idea that Mycroft was smarter than Sherlock. Yes, they kept telling us, but what they showed was very different. Ah, Moffat.....
I don't agree with JB setting a high standard, in my opinion he did set just a normal good standard in which the other actors after him were way below of what normally good serius performances should be! But it's not just one actor but the sum of the actors and directors as well that contributed to these well made series and good acting! That's why I think to some people or millennials it seems like his acting is very great or legendary because people compare it to other's actors playing after him and their role was not good at all, when in fact it's just a well played role and it shouldn't be hyped at all.
@@cain527And Sherlock is only a couple of years older. I do think they might be in their early 30s, as John has left the Army after being wounded in Afghanistan. But every English language version has always made them older, at least at the beginning, than Conan Doyle's stories.
@@davidw.2791both men do seem fairly youthful here, particularly David Burke as Watson. He certainly seems more spry than Edmund Hardwicke. Charles Gray steals the scene anyway.
Charles Gray is impeccable as Mycroft. That slightly disconcerted look he gives Watson when he says: "But surely you were taking things a little too far just now..."
I still haven't seen a better interpretation of Holmes than this man. Everyone forgets how human Holmes is. I will, though, express that Stephen Fry was an excellent Mycroft, as well.
@starchildstrider What a man! He's been gone almost 24 yrs, but you wouldn't know it. I created a Sherlock tribute board on Pinterest maybe 3 days ago. Within hours- people were following the page...
@Qwerty123 He and Scofield were certainly contemporaries, so I'm not sure why. They appear to have been on parallel with tracks on the stage at least. JB was mentored by Laurence Olivier, and then Hollywood called. His credits run the gamut from Dracula with Charlton Heston to a guest spot on the Love Boat! IMDb.com is an excellent resource to find who did what and when...
It was my good fortune to find the complete volume of Sherlock Holmes which includes four novels and fifty six adventures by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. I found it in a second hand shop a decade ago for less than five dollars. It’s one of my favorites books. When I read the adventures, I only picture Jeremy Brett as Sherlock Holmes and no one else. I watch these episodes over & over. I never tire of them. If I must go away, I take my complete Sherlock Holmes with me to read. Hooked on Sherlock.
I'm from India. I bought that collection back in the 1990s, as soon as I started earning. Mine also has the original illustrations from the Strand magazine. I had watched JB's Sherlock on TV in the late 1980s and simply loved him.
They support each other when it is needed most. When Holmes and Watson had to disappear to escape Moriarty, Mycroft drove the cab with Watson. When Mycroft needed Holmes to help him recover secret submarine plans that were stolen, Holmes jumped to help him. Sure, they both have egos, but they stick together when the situation calls for it.
That was actually a pretty good bit of deduction on Watson's part. If the police and half of London have Holmes' number on speed dial (or whatever the equivalent of speed dial was in the late 1800's) then it would stand to reason that people would know more about Mycroft.
Social networking in the beginning, then the Strand publications some time after Watson started writing. Though I do believe the use of the early telephone network featured in at least one of the Edwardian-era Holmes stories.
HufflePuff, all the best public servants are come from that house. Concientious, competent and without malice. Worker bees for the others and therefore more likely go survive various magic wars. But Mycroft probably ended up in Ravencraw because of The Shyness and Misanthropy 😊
@@et4751 I'd probably tip towards Ravenclaw!Mycroft too. He seems to enjoy being off in his own mind more than anything else. Considering we find out he basically supervises the entire British government later on, he clearly doesn't mind mental exertion, just physical. And yet he's not in it for power or money (Sherlock specifically says he isn't paid that much), he just does the work for its own sake. He clearly does care about Sherlock and is a loyal brother in his way, but relationships don't seem to be his priority. It's mentioned in the stories that he's visited Sherlock at home a grand total of 2 times. Of course, you can be introverted and a Hufflepuff, and I wouldn't totally rule out Mycroft being one, but I'd expect personal connections to be a bigger focus for him if he was.
@@et4751 "All the best public servants come from that house." Can you please cite your sources for that? As a Hufflepuff, I'm happy to see the house recognized for being as awesome as it is! :)
It is actually very amusing to play this game at the mall. Me and my Father always engage in meaningful conversations about this 'game of assumptions' as he calls it
God damn that is a good looking Sherlock Holmes. I mean, besides of the acting, which is also fantastic. What a really high standard for any other actor aspiring to be Sherlock.
Hands down the best of all the different varieties and Versions of Sherlock Holmes. Nothing after this series compares to me .some before are good and I've enjoyed them this one just hits me like an arrow from Robbin hood streight to the heart of doing wonderful things well.
I do love the full enjoyment of the situation that plays across Watson's face as he watches the two brothers speaking easily to each other, divining what others cannot.
When I saw this in my You Tube list, I immediately thought of my late uncle. He often mentioned Mycroft to me, and it was my uncle who told me about Mycroft.
Well I know some think Nero may be descended from Mycroft or Sherlock (perhaps a son) and if either is true, he definitely took after Mycroft. Because yeah, Nero is brilliant, but he doesn't actually like being a detective, hence why he charges so much for his services and has Archie do all the legwork. Nero is very much what I imagine Mycroft would do if circumstances forced him to use his deductive abilities as a profession rather than as effectively a party trick. I mean as we see from his expanded role in a few episodes, Gray's Mycroft absolutely could be a successful detective if he wanted to, but he doesn't want to, he is content with the life he has and moves from it only when circumstances force him to do so.
@@juliagoodfellow7539 Indeed so, it was a real shame what happened to Brett, especially since it cost us one of the great friendship moments of the series between Holmes and Watson, but Gray did an admirable job in the circumstances. The way that Grenada changed the climax of 'The Greek Interpreter' to keep Mycroft involved (very successfully too) and added him to 'The Golden Pince-Nez' when Edward Hardwicke was unavailable, actually helped make 'The Mazarin Stone' more plausible, since where Doyle's Mycroft shows little aptitude for practical detective work, Grenada's interpretation is shown right from the off to be much like Wolfe: He can do it. He just doesn't like doing it.
LOLROFLMAO! EVen this level of acting has disappeared, let alone the tremendous production values of this show. I saw it when originally broadcast - what a beautiful creation.
I love the affection between these two. And for a rather crude comment, I've always wondered about that room in the Diogenes club. What if someone passed gas? I mean it's so darn quiet in there.
@@johnking5174 even worse! (Though thank you for the actual facts! Didn't know! I was referring to the Sherlock Canon of Mycroft being 7 years Sherlock's senior)
Later in that episode if l remember right Mycroft shouts :'Sherlock, lam not made for running... ! ' l like the interactions between these two brothers... so quite seldom... but if so, they work together in a great fasion...
Surely there must be a monograph upon the the creation and preponderance of these famous private clubs we read and see so much of. (Frankly, I find the idea of a silent reading room that serves cocktails immensely appealing) We know all about these higher-snoot Gentleman's Clubs, but I know that lower-class clubs were quite the rage all over. In my own neighborhood, in Baltimore, there was the "Charcoal Club" (on 25th st?) A more eclectic artist's establishment from the 1880s to which members were admitted upon recommendation and submitting a charcoal drawing of sufficient artistic merit. (I'd assumed it had shuttered ages ago but I'm informed it's still there to this very day)
I prefer this interpretation of Mycroft over all the others. There is no real animosity between the two, just the meeting of two similar minds engaged in a familiar game.
I completely agree! What they did with the character Mycroft in the tv-show Elementary is so so wrong. The missed, in what is otherwise a great tv-show, both the actor and the stories.
Yes. And the BBC completely left behind the idea that Mycroft was smarter than Sherlock. Yes, they kept telling us, but what they showed was very different. Ah, Moffat.....
@@crabbieappleton not to mention, Sherlock is a brat in the BBC one. I can't even see him as an adult with the way he's acting
@@crabbieappleton Mycroft was such an idiot in Sherlock, at least in the last season.
They also behave more like brothers in how they greet one another while Elementary and Sherlock pairs act like temperamental children.
Holmes: … My brother Mycroft…
Watson: [Dear God there’s more than one of them…] … _you have a brother?_
Yes I miss this version.
I have always admired JB as Sherlock Holmes. He set a high standard for all other actors to follow.
I don't agree with JB setting a high standard, in my opinion he did set just a normal good standard in which the other actors after him were way below of what normally good serius performances should be!
But it's not just one actor but the sum of the actors and directors as well that contributed to these well made series and good acting!
That's why I think to some people or millennials it seems like his acting is very great or legendary because people compare it to other's actors playing after him and their role was not good at all, when in fact it's just a well played role and it shouldn't be hyped at all.
@@andreanicolas9363 that's alot of writing for what amounts to a load of old claptrap.
J.B. OWNS the role. Once you see him I that role , he will become the only Holmes ever.
Fritz Weaver was a great Holmes on Broadway in the 60s.
Thus far unmatched, in my opinion
the look on WATSON'S face when he meets MYCROFT '' Oh good GOD there are two of them !!'' surprised and elated great scene !! AFTERNOON!!
John Watson was about 25-30 years old. This old man is not Watson. Vitaly Solomin is the greatest Watson of all time.
@@cain527And Sherlock is only a couple of years older. I do think they might be in their early 30s, as John has left the Army after being wounded in Afghanistan. But every English language version has always made them older, at least at the beginning, than Conan Doyle's stories.
@@robbarbieri8676We never get A Study In Scarlet in the Jeremy Brett version and therefore there is no episode where they are required to be young.
@@cain527rubbish, this is the BEST Watson, bar none.
@@davidw.2791both men do seem fairly youthful here, particularly David Burke as Watson. He certainly seems more spry than Edmund Hardwicke. Charles Gray steals the scene anyway.
"But what are the qualifications for the Diogenes club?"
"Shyness and misanthropy"
LMAOOOO
Where do I sign up!? ;)
I'm confident I will make the cut. Where do I sign up?
The ultimate club of 'minding your own damn business.' Count me in.
I'm in.
count me in!
The look of total and pure admiration in Watson’s eyes as he talks to Mycroft is so perfect.
And Charles Gray is perfect for the role.
Mycroft is very affectionate to his younger brother & also to Dr. Watson. I like it.
Yes, this Mycroft, OWNS that role.
Charles Gray is impeccable as Mycroft. That slightly disconcerted look he gives Watson when he says: "But surely you were taking things a little too far just now..."
He's a little too ancient.
The best interpretation of Sherlock and Mycroft Holmes imo. Way better than the latest adaptations of these iconic characters.
Have you seen cowboy Mycroft?
@@mrhutchblackdog4636 Cowboy Mycroft? Explain yourself
I also liked Christopher Lee's Mycroft.
Stephen Fry's mycroft was great as well, that character suits him well although the movie itself left much to be desired.
Ron Howard did a good version in the 1950s TV show. They are very faithful to the short stories.
I'm going to have to sit down with a cup of tea and watch these all. The camera pan over all the misanthropic men ignoring each other is BRILLIANT.
As a introvert is a blessing. Doing your own thing in a classy place, just having a nice time.
Not much of a extrovert either, but man... after a time, this would feel stifling.
I expected the club to be empty, sure you need a club, but not the crowd.
This has to be one of my favourite scenes in all the series. All 3 actors playing their respective roles perfectly.
My thoughts exactly.
God, he is a damned fine Sherlock!!!!
Tracey Hand The finest. And only actor to act out all the canonical stories if memory serves me.
Tracey You look damn fine as well. I'm just saying.
@@markhenryramsey9132 Not quite all of them.
He is the ^only^ Sherlock.
I adore Benedict Cumberbatch, bit Jeremy Brett will always be *the* Sherlock Holmes.
Charles Gray's Mycroft is perfect, no pettiness just a mischievous oneupmanship between an older brother and his sibling
If the art of the detective began and ended in reasoning from an arm-chair, my brother would be the greatest criminal agent that ever lived. :)
Rex Stout: "Hold my beer!"
@@andrewallen7962 Nero Wolfe enters the chat...
One of the BEST scenes in the Series. I LOVED Watson's look on His face. I'm happy that the Complete Series is now on Blu-ray.
It's now on blu-ray? I have the complete series on DVD but this is one I'll be happy to upgrade for.
Oh, man, I wish I could afford the DVD set of this series, let alone the Blu-ray. Not to mention a Blu-ray player :P lol
@@riversong4997 I've just bought the dvd box set on ebay for £15!
@@riversong4997 same here!!! The complete series of Granada Sherlock Holmes is so expensive here in the US!
Jeremy Brett and Edward Hardwicke shows that you do not need CGI to make a great Sherlock Holmes. For me this is Sherlock Holmes and no other.
@stephen noonan I agree, and I wish they had kept David Burke.
@@zorrothefox2000 they would have done I think but he had an offer from the Royal Shakespeare Company which he wanted to take up.
@@blossie33 and from what I heard, Edward became Watson on the show on behalf of Burke’s recommendation.
@@RobertSmithhalo yes, I think I heard that said in an interview too.
@@zorrothefox2000 Yes, I wish David Burke continued playing Watson. Edward Hardwicke was good. But David Burke was far better.
Charles Gray was clearly enjoying himself. He was brilliant as Mycroft and had played him previously in "The Seven Percent Solution"
He also brilliantly played Julius Caesar in the BBC production.
I still haven't seen a better interpretation of Holmes than this man. Everyone forgets how human Holmes is.
I will, though, express that Stephen Fry was an excellent Mycroft, as well.
I agree, Stephen Fry's Mycroft perfectly encapsulates Mycroft being a low energy shut in, but also a wry genius.
@@markgresch9944 My only criticism is with the script, that has Mycroft be out observed by Holmes.
Blasphemy.
"This is getting out of hand, now there are two of them!"
There will never be another Sherlock like JBs. He was superb and the sexiest man ever.
I entirely agree! My goodness, what a fine Holmes!
@starchildstrider Move over and let me get into this swoon, lol!!!
@Qwerty123 He is a force of nature! My chest hurts just watching these video tributes!
@starchildstrider What a man! He's been gone almost 24 yrs, but you wouldn't know it. I created a Sherlock tribute board on Pinterest maybe 3 days ago. Within hours- people were following the page...
@Qwerty123 He and Scofield were certainly contemporaries, so I'm not sure why. They appear to have been on parallel with tracks on the stage at least. JB was mentored by Laurence Olivier, and then Hollywood called. His credits run the gamut from Dracula with Charlton Heston to a guest spot on the Love Boat! IMDb.com is an excellent resource to find who did what and when...
It was my good fortune to find the complete volume of Sherlock Holmes which includes four novels and fifty six adventures by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. I found it in a second hand shop a decade ago for less than five dollars. It’s one of my favorites books. When I read the adventures, I only picture Jeremy Brett as Sherlock Holmes and no one else. I watch these episodes over & over. I never tire of them. If I must go away, I take my complete Sherlock Holmes with me to read. Hooked on Sherlock.
I'm from India. I bought that collection back in the 1990s, as soon as I started earning. Mine also has the original illustrations from the Strand magazine. I had watched JB's Sherlock on TV in the late 1980s and simply loved him.
What a club. "We can talk in here", and it's the library.
Lol
Modern Entertainment likes to view these brothers as brothers who just can't stand each other, this is why I like this version of them.
They support each other when it is needed most. When Holmes and Watson had to disappear to escape Moriarty, Mycroft drove the cab with Watson. When Mycroft needed Holmes to help him recover secret submarine plans that were stolen, Holmes jumped to help him. Sure, they both have egos, but they stick together when the situation calls for it.
The Stephen Fry / Guy Richie version seemed to get on fine with his brother. Even going so far to call him Shirley.
So good, Watson like a fan at meet&greet
And these two, the most charming brotherly rivalry that I have ever seen.
I love the no talking rule.
I dated someone who loved this as well...
@@wendybabendy I guess you guys didn't have much to say. Lol !
I just read about "quiet cafes" in Japan, and my first thought was the Diogenes Club.
Many Old School clubs had/have silent areas for those inclined. It's a good policy.
he was the sherlock that i grew up with so JB will always be my sherlock holmes and i will always appreciate what a fine job he did.
That was actually a pretty good bit of deduction on Watson's part. If the police and half of London have Holmes' number on speed dial (or whatever the equivalent of speed dial was in the late 1800's) then it would stand to reason that people would know more about Mycroft.
Social networking in the beginning, then the Strand publications some time after Watson started writing. Though I do believe the use of the early telephone network featured in at least one of the Edwardian-era Holmes stories.
The form of speed dial in Holmes era would have been the baker Street irregulars.
@@eddievhfan1984 I believe Watson and Holmes also got a lot of regular mail as well as telegrams.
It was rather shoddy actually since he himself only knew Holmes by chance, and London only knows Holmes because Watson writes about him.
Not when Mycroft doesn't want them to.
I absolutely loved this series as it tried to be as close to the stories as it possibly could!
They were so wonderful together weren't they.
Jeremy Brett is the Ultimate Sherlock Holmes
"He has no ambition" There goes my thought of making Mycroft a Slytherin.
We always have BBC Sherlock version of Mycroft I'm-Ministry-of-Magic Holmes
Mycroft is indeed a hufflepuff . He has no regard for Slytherian ambition as his too intelligent . He knows it's self defeating and limited .
HufflePuff, all the best public servants are come from that house. Concientious, competent and without malice. Worker bees for the others and therefore more likely go survive various magic wars. But Mycroft probably ended up in Ravencraw because of The Shyness and Misanthropy 😊
@@et4751 I'd probably tip towards Ravenclaw!Mycroft too. He seems to enjoy being off in his own mind more than anything else. Considering we find out he basically supervises the entire British government later on, he clearly doesn't mind mental exertion, just physical. And yet he's not in it for power or money (Sherlock specifically says he isn't paid that much), he just does the work for its own sake.
He clearly does care about Sherlock and is a loyal brother in his way, but relationships don't seem to be his priority. It's mentioned in the stories that he's visited Sherlock at home a grand total of 2 times. Of course, you can be introverted and a Hufflepuff, and I wouldn't totally rule out Mycroft being one, but I'd expect personal connections to be a bigger focus for him if he was.
@@et4751 "All the best public servants come from that house." Can you please cite your sources for that? As a Hufflepuff, I'm happy to see the house recognized for being as awesome as it is! :)
It could only be Charles Gray. What casting!
It is actually very amusing to play this game at the mall. Me and my Father always engage in meaningful conversations about this 'game of assumptions' as he calls it
obsessed with how Holmes and Watson both skip steps. these boys are going places! quickly!
Yes, I love Mycroft.
God damn that is a good looking Sherlock Holmes. I mean, besides of the acting, which is also fantastic. What a really high standard for any other actor aspiring to be Sherlock.
Charles Gray bought a mystery and intrigue to Mycroft that very few actors could ever have done. Such an underrated actor. Fabulous actor .
Hands down the best of all the different varieties and Versions of Sherlock Holmes. Nothing after this series compares to me .some before are good and I've enjoyed them this one just hits me like an arrow from Robbin hood streight to the heart of doing wonderful things well.
2:46 For whatever reason, this is one of my favorite scenes from this episode.
Absolutely superb performances . Top quality
The admiration and affection JB shows for his brother in his eyes is fine acting.
I like this Sherlock-Mycroft portrayal much better than the one in BBC Sherlock. These 2 actually have a familial fondness that is quite touching.
I LOVE that line! It says everything about Mycroft and his character.
That's a club for the intelligence community, no two ways about it, also love the look of curiosity on his face when he finds out about mycroft
Watson's like *oh my god fascinating..
Ahh, Sherlock. It's just a jump to the left.
Any role by Charles Grey is always a masterpiece! 💙
All of these actors are legends, but Charles Gray is perfection as Mycroft. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Mycroft.... are you still trying to take over the world with that diamond powered satellite?
one of my favorite scenes !!
Absolute best depiction of Holmes in any film or TV adaption. I loved this series!!
When I was reading Sherlock Holmes this guy right here is what I picture as Sherlock.
Mycroft is a well of
knowledge. SH
The best Sherlock Holmes in the world
Curiosity of Dr Watson is true acting prowess.
I'm not the first to say and I hope not the last, but this Sherlock Mycroft dynamic is the best one I've seen, not just this episode either.
The way Holmes gives Mycroft that little smile when he first sees him just gets me!
The expression on Brett's face when he first sees Mycroft is just fantastic.
Take note..when Sherlock Holmes calls you odd....you're odd!
I do love the full enjoyment of the situation that plays across Watson's face as he watches the two brothers speaking easily to each other, divining what others cannot.
I love Mycroft .. 💙
When I saw this in my You Tube list, I immediately thought of my late uncle. He often mentioned Mycroft to me, and it was my uncle who told me about Mycroft.
i always want to go back in times and to live victorian era ever since i saw this serial and dreamt of recreating baker street 221B
Way easier to do that now than to go back then. No toilets, no running water, no dentists, the list goes on, and on. Have some fun and do it now.
"if the
art of the detective began and ended in reasoning from an armchair "
That's Nero Wolfe in a nut Shell !
Well I know some think Nero may be descended from Mycroft or Sherlock (perhaps a son) and if either is true, he definitely took after Mycroft.
Because yeah, Nero is brilliant, but he doesn't actually like being a detective, hence why he charges so much for his services and has Archie do all the legwork.
Nero is very much what I imagine Mycroft would do if circumstances forced him to use his deductive abilities as a profession rather than as effectively a party trick. I mean as we see from his expanded role in a few episodes, Gray's Mycroft absolutely could be a successful detective if he wanted to, but he doesn't want to, he is content with the life he has and moves from it only when circumstances force him to do so.
@@JamesTobiasStewartThey needed him to step up to finish the series because JB was too ill to work. He did a great job.
@@juliagoodfellow7539 Indeed so, it was a real shame what happened to Brett, especially since it cost us one of the great friendship moments of the series between Holmes and Watson, but Gray did an admirable job in the circumstances.
The way that Grenada changed the climax of 'The Greek Interpreter' to keep Mycroft involved (very successfully too) and added him to 'The Golden Pince-Nez' when Edward Hardwicke was unavailable, actually helped make 'The Mazarin Stone' more plausible, since where Doyle's Mycroft shows little aptitude for practical detective work, Grenada's interpretation is shown right from the off to be much like Wolfe: He can do it. He just doesn't like doing it.
This series was the truest dramatic portrayal as to what was actually written in the stories that I have ever seen.
And wonderful writing.
LOLROFLMAO! EVen this level of acting has disappeared, let alone the tremendous production values of this show. I saw it when originally broadcast - what a beautiful creation.
I love the affection between these two. And for a rather crude comment, I've always wondered about that room in the Diogenes club. What if someone passed gas? I mean it's so darn quiet in there.
Passed gas? Surely you jest.
There was only one meeting criteria for diogenes club at the starting. That was shyness. Then someone farted and by default misanthropy was added.
Jeremy Brett was my favorite Sherlock Holmes. Great mix of class and mad genius…
My God.... how I miss Jeremy as Holmes!
"He has no ambition and no energy" - me after I hit 40.
Brett was the perfect Holmes.
Does Sherlock not realise his brother once tried to destroy Washington DC with a space laser?
What is this reference? It sounds familiar.
@@riversong4997 Diamonds are Forever (Que James Bond Theme)
@@George-Hawthorne thank you!
And that’s how it’s done.
Jeremy Brett... As Sherlock... Nothing less will do.
Watson is breaking the fourth wall by looking at us, as if he’s asking “Can you believe this? And people still think I exaggerate Holmes’s abilities!”
Ooooof. Those 7 years older than Sherlock have not been kind to Mikey.
Charles Gray was born in 1928. Jeremy Brett was born in 1933. So only 5 years real age difference.
@@johnking5174 even worse! (Though thank you for the actual facts! Didn't know! I was referring to the Sherlock Canon of Mycroft being 7 years Sherlock's senior)
This Holmes will never be bettered
Later in that episode if l remember right Mycroft shouts :'Sherlock, lam not made for running... ! ' l like the interactions between these two brothers... so quite seldom... but if so, they work together in a great fasion...
Best Holmes ever. Make no mistake
I really do need to watch this version someday… somehow!
Surely there must be a monograph upon the the creation and preponderance of these famous private clubs we read and see so much of. (Frankly, I find the idea of a silent reading room that serves cocktails immensely appealing) We know all about these higher-snoot Gentleman's Clubs, but I know that lower-class clubs were quite the rage all over. In my own neighborhood, in Baltimore, there was the "Charcoal Club" (on 25th st?) A more eclectic artist's establishment from the 1880s to which members were admitted upon recommendation and submitting a charcoal drawing of sufficient artistic merit. (I'd assumed it had shuttered ages ago but I'm informed it's still there to this very day)
In my opinion... Jeremy Brett is to Sherlock Holmes what Tom Baker is to Doctor Who.
My favourite version of Sherlock Holmes
Jeremy Brett is Holmes, the look, the mannerisms, the presence.
The diogenes club sounds fantastic for someone like me.
و من😢
Charles Grey was splendid as Mycroft. I dont know how many times I’ve watched the Mazarin stone...
2:43 this whole scene is so funny and cute
The best Sherlock and Mycroft ever put on film.
Watson's "Are you shitting me?" face at 1:23
The best of the best
Holmes wore the Jeremy outfit well
Brett was a genius!
At least there is no one standing in a large pot relieving himself on passersby. That would be a true Diogenes Club.
I think they might go to the stranger's room for such an indiscretion :)
Absolute perfection.
such a brilliant scene
I absolutely adore Jeremy Brett.
As they pan through the reading room I swear one of those men looks just like Larry Tate from Bewitched!
Yep the guy in the big chair reading the paper at 3:07
4:10 that moment when Mycroft scores the winning point against Sherlock. Its why i love his character so much!