My favourite Sherlock Holmes actor in classic movie, definitely Jeremy Brett and the present time definitely Benedict Cumberbatch. Both of them managed to make the character of 'Sherlock Holmes' full with wits, craziness and mysterious. Thank you for uploading and sharing. ❤️❤️❤️
@@iljavija Yes, Suchet really did nail Poirot, and I didnt think, it was possible to do better than Peter Ustinov. I was wrong! I agree with Jeremy Brett being the ultimate Holmes, tho.
@@anthonysokolsky6210 👌🏾.. I would think he is accurate to the tee as the book describes Sherlock. Eccentricities from being a Loner and Intellect with the occassional outbursts.
@@anthonysokolsky6210 do play high notes a lot, but the character of homes only come the high and low notes, with now middle ground, that he drug problem comes from, and be never make good tv or film, but I would like add, being drug user not as being today, it was simpler times back then
Yes, he does seem to have a genuine presence as Holmes. Although pretty much everyone who has played the part has done a good job. Given the original material any adaptation has a chance of success.
One of the better Sherlock Holmes movies. And despite the hypercritical comments of some people below there is absolutely nothing wrong with the English accents. Watson is perfect and Holmes is speaking with the sort of over precise, exaggerated RP generally associated with the character.
Intestingly, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, like many of his contemporaries, became involved - if not obsessed - with spiritualism and the paranormal after the First World War. He wrote a number of sympathetic books on the subject.
@@russcooke5671 Yes, indeed. I read the Martin Booth biography and it sets this in context. JK Rowling also shows how creators of hyper-popular characters can believe their kudos as a writer will rub off on their campaigning work. Not sure it does.
In the West the establishment of double monasteries became popular after Columbanus and sprang up in Gaul and in Anglo-Saxon England. Double monasteries were forbidden by the Second Council of Nicaea in 787, though it took many years for the decree to be enforced. Double monasteries were revived again after the 12th century in a significantly different way when a number of religious houses were established on this pattern among Benedictines and possibly the Dominicans. The 14th-century Bridgittines were purposely founded using this form of community.
It was an entertaining film, but I must point out an important discrepancy. Sherlock Holmes was not written as an atheist/agnostic on the grounds that science and faith are incompatible. In the Catholic way of things, both are aspects of the "mind of God." Therefore, being closed to either is both a reduction of the intellect and a shutting down of vital exploration into that which may reduce human suffering. A central aim in the Catholic schema. Back in the day, natural philosophy (an early term for science) was a compulsory element of the theology degree taken by all priests. The Catholic Church supports science. She is responsible for recovering and preserving many works of Greece and Rome. These works didn't have traction in the crumbling ruins of the pagan Ancient World. However, under the mantal of the Church, many were absorbed usefully. The Catholic Church was the first to found the university. The central compulsory courses were called the seven liberal arts. These were logic, grammar, rhetoric, mathematics, geometry, astronomy, and music. Surrounding this central placement were other courses pertinent to a career, such as law. Some of the most celebrated Church men and women have made significant contributions to science. The Belgian priest Gregor Mendel is the father of genetics. His work was said to complete Darwins evolutionary thinking. The Augustinian Friar, Georges Lamaitre, was the first to postulate the expanding universe and the Big Bang. I leave a quote from Albert Einstein. "Science without religion is lame. Religion without science is blind." The Catholic Christian Church is and has always been an exponent of that balance. Arthur Conan Doyal was raised a Catholic. He externally lapsed and became involved in the spiritualist fashion of the day. However, the saying "Once a Catholic always a Catholic" can be recognised in his writings. He touched base with the Christian God in his explorations into alternative spirituality. He wrote Sherlock Holmes as a man of faith. This is important because modern atheists flip the script and write up all characters from all time periods as atheists. What could be seen as an amusing plot twist could have the effect of supporting atheists who lie blatantly about intelligent men of science sneering at faith. The truth is very far from this. Thank you for taking the time to read this.
Nice try but with the exception of a few notable people like Mendel and Teilhard de Chardin, the Catholic church has been the implacable enemy of scientific progress. Any advances in science that have taken place have been in spite of the Church.
@mikelheron20 Produce examples to back up your claims. If you Google Catholic scientists, you will get pages and pages of examples. It is true that the Church must introduce an ethical aspect in scientific enquiry. She must also take socio-political realities into account. She is, after all, a body that has responsibilities broader than simply science. What you did was repeat an old canard about the Catholic Church. Naturally, you produced no evidence. I, on the other hand, constructed my comment with solid evidence throughout.
@ioannissarelis7281 I'm sorry, but I can't respond to your point because it isn't clear exactly what you mean. If you scanned down the comment to the end and are responding to my thanking people who read it with a "We didn't," that is not something to brag about. Reading is rather important.
Would that be the catholic church that burned people for heresy if they said the earth revolved around the sun? That encourager of scientific research and mathematics?
@russcooke5671 The Demeter was the name of the ship that Dracula arrived to England aboard. And I may have been confusing Renshaw for Renfield, a character in the story .. ;)
@@alistairogilvy7696 hay that's grassed it up brother, poor dude getn too much of a critique! Yes. Always. Always is there room for improvement. Many men, talented and skillful men, replete upon the task at hand. It's an interesting. The United states of America, oh hey there's the reason in Good folk gettn the supreme Court is love folks, the UN and the EU and WEF the World Health Organisation . It's a loooooong story, ohldis been going on for billions of years. Amitabha 🙏💖😁
Like all other Holmes and Watson adventures this too is a favourite of mine. Both acteurs were outstanding in Hound of the Baskerville, truly enjoyed it!🕵️🕯️🔎
Enjoyable, but I can’t help seeing Matt Frewer in his Star Trek role. Jeremy Brett was the finest Sherlock Holmes in my opinion, closely followed by Basil Rathbone.
This is about the best rendition of Sherlock Holmes I have seen. Matt Frewer is amazing. There is just a flow to the story that keeps you glued to the screen. A 10 out of 10.
A classic and the gardening tool is similar to the Sir Basil Rathbone Scarlet Claw film.Very enjoyable and I would put this one up there with the Christopher Plummer/James Mason Jack the Ripper film.
That made me smile given all the turmoil at present. But I think somehow the spirit of the nation will always be the same. It the geography and island nation that will make it British. Or something like it in the future. ...from Ireland.
Arthur Conan Doyle was a huge spiritualist and believed in speaking with the dead, and all the shenanigans associated with spiritual charlatanism. He even believed both his wives had medium powers. For Holmes to be written in this way is highly ironic.
This portrays Holmes as too smug, even for Holmes - it's a gross exaggeration. Brett and Hardwicke are the best so far - but, as with the James Bond stories, it would be wonderful if someone could film the original stories faithfully to the book - the worst Holmes films are the takes on 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' - with the exception of the Brett/Hardwicke version - although even in that some of the supporting actors are pretty dire, and there is deviation from the original - e.g. the details about the note compiled by Mrs. Stapleton. Both Ian Fleming and Conan Doyle were superb story tellers, and when film makers try to 'improve' on the plot they produce complete crap.
An amusing Enid Blyton version, best watched supping a couple of glasses of red on a cold Winter's evening. Note to producer....when following villains down a stone paved corridor, FFS kick your leather soled shoes off first. Watson sounded like a herd of wilderbeest.
The fool has said in his heart, there is no God. This is what the Bible says. So God himself thinks you a fool if you say there is no God. And If you don't like being called a fool. Take it up with God, and good luck with that.......
Diabolical, and thats just the accents, at one point I expected Dick Van Dyke to jump up and exclaim "lord bless us Mary Poppins" before breaking out dancing to step in time. Max Headroom, sorry Matt Freuer as Sherlock? "Blimey guv, he's a rummun and no mistake!"
@@betweenprojects Yes, I've read about Doyle's spiritualism; and some of the original stories do have supernatural overtones. I meant that this story is bad/boring - I don't remember reading this one in the original works - and I thought the actor playing Homes must have never read them; he was just so ... I don't know ... simply not Holmes.
Στο Όνομα του Θεού! Και όλοι οι δαίμονες οπισθοχωρούν και συντρίβονται μπροστά στη δύναμη του Σταυρού Θα ήθελα να είχα την Πίστη εκείνης της τυφλής μοναχής
Who's your favorite TV/movie Sherlock Holmes?
Rathbone and Bruce, then Brett and Hardwicke
@@martmako1 I certainly wouldn't have underestimated Douglas Wilmer either!
Croatian translation? 🙏
Jeremy Brett is the absolute perfect Sherlock Holmes.
Basil Rathbone - Jeremy Brett following in a close second.
My favourite Sherlock Holmes actor in classic movie, definitely Jeremy Brett and the present time definitely Benedict Cumberbatch. Both of them managed to make the character of 'Sherlock Holmes' full with wits, craziness and mysterious. Thank you for uploading and sharing. ❤️❤️❤️
Matt Frewer did a good job too. It is Poirot that will never be matched, David Suchet nailed that role.
@@iljavija Yes, Suchet really did nail Poirot, and I didnt think, it was possible to do better than Peter Ustinov. I was wrong! I agree with Jeremy Brett being the ultimate Holmes, tho.
It was Brett, I believe, who blamed the role for the onset of his depression.
Nemertea Brett is my fav too.
@@billyandrew I think so too, yet he's the best.
It's about the 6th time I've watched this movie! An absolute gem!
😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢p😢p
Well I hope u have seen the Sherlock Holmes series with Jeremy Brett as Sherlock Holmes.
@@spoon1882 I have & I find that Jeremy Brett (R.I.P.) overacts the part somewhat!
@@anthonysokolsky6210 👌🏾.. I would think he is accurate to the tee as the book describes Sherlock. Eccentricities from being a Loner and Intellect with the occassional outbursts.
@@anthonysokolsky6210 do play high notes a lot, but the character of homes only come the high and low notes, with now middle ground, that he drug problem comes from, and be never make good tv or film, but I would like add, being drug user not as being today, it was simpler times back then
I love Sherlock Holmes ! It is one of my favourite characters!
Jeremy Brett is still the best to play this character
Yes, he does seem to have a genuine presence as Holmes. Although pretty much everyone who has played the part has done a good job. Given the original material any adaptation has a chance of success.
Basil Rathbone was the best Sherlock Holmes
I'm Brazilian and I went to London one day and I didn't rest until I entered the house on Baker Street.
The real 221 b. Baker Street was bombed in the war it’s about 100 mts from where the shop is now. 👌👌👌
Great movie. Really enjoyed this characterisation of Holmes, Watson et al.
Enjoyed it. Hopefully, upload the others from the Matt Frewer Sherlock Holmes collection.
One of the better Sherlock Holmes movies. And despite the hypercritical comments of some people below there is absolutely nothing wrong with the English accents. Watson is perfect and Holmes is speaking with the sort of over precise, exaggerated RP generally associated with the character.
The accents are BBC of the day. It's upper crust educated RP, but not as clipped as I expected.
This is great! Thanks for sharing
You're welcome!
I stayed to end. A good movie to enjoy. Thank you for this movie ❤
Intestingly, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, like many of his contemporaries, became involved - if not obsessed - with spiritualism and the paranormal after the First World War. He wrote a number of sympathetic books on the subject.
He see photos of fairies and believed they were real.
@@russcooke5671 Yes, indeed. I read the Martin Booth biography and it sets this in context. JK Rowling also shows how creators of hyper-popular characters can believe their kudos as a writer will rub off on their campaigning work. Not sure it does.
@@russcooke5671where they the cottingley ones I wonder?
@@azillliasmith2734 they were indeed. 👌👌
@@azillliasmith2734 they were. He wrote a book on the subject called the coming of the Faries
Very good story quite atmospheric 😊
Thanks for the nice words!
Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson are good no matter who plays them!
Even Max Headroom 😉😁
very much so. hahaha 'loved reading the story books as well"
Beauty of the writing! Masterful🎉
No one beats Rasil Bathbone.
Great Holmes and Watson.
i was never bored, greatly made ❤❤
Correct me if I'm wrong, but monks live in monasteries, and nuns live in convents. Not monks and nuns together.
The gilberteans did I believe...see the old time team series
In the West the establishment of double monasteries became popular after Columbanus and sprang up in Gaul and in Anglo-Saxon England. Double monasteries were forbidden by the Second Council of Nicaea in 787, though it took many years for the decree to be enforced. Double monasteries were revived again after the 12th century in a significantly different way when a number of religious houses were established on this pattern among Benedictines and possibly the Dominicans. The 14th-century Bridgittines were purposely founded using this form of community.
Put off by the innappropriate brown man - quite out of place.
Wrong
@@keicbellThankyou for your informed response ❤
It was an entertaining film, but I must point out an important discrepancy. Sherlock Holmes was not written as an atheist/agnostic on the grounds that science and faith are incompatible. In the Catholic way of things, both are aspects of the "mind of God." Therefore, being closed to either is both a reduction of the intellect and a shutting down of vital exploration into that which may reduce human suffering. A central aim in the Catholic schema.
Back in the day, natural philosophy (an early term for science) was a compulsory element of the theology degree taken by all priests.
The Catholic Church supports science. She is responsible for recovering and preserving many works of Greece and Rome. These works didn't have traction in the crumbling ruins of the pagan Ancient World. However, under the mantal of the Church, many were absorbed usefully. The Catholic Church was the first to found the university. The central compulsory courses were called the seven liberal arts. These were logic, grammar, rhetoric, mathematics, geometry, astronomy, and music. Surrounding this central placement were other courses pertinent to a career, such as law.
Some of the most celebrated Church men and women have made significant contributions to science. The Belgian priest Gregor Mendel is the father of genetics. His work was said to complete Darwins evolutionary thinking. The Augustinian Friar, Georges Lamaitre, was the first to postulate the expanding universe and the Big Bang.
I leave a quote from Albert Einstein.
"Science without religion is lame. Religion without science is blind."
The Catholic Christian Church is and has always been an exponent of that balance. Arthur Conan Doyal was raised a Catholic. He externally lapsed and became involved in the spiritualist fashion of the day. However, the saying "Once a Catholic always a Catholic" can be recognised in his writings. He touched base with the Christian God in his explorations into alternative spirituality.
He wrote Sherlock Holmes as a man of faith. This is important because modern atheists flip the script and write up all characters from all time periods as atheists. What could be seen as an amusing plot twist could have the effect of supporting atheists who lie blatantly about intelligent men of science sneering at faith.
The truth is very far from this.
Thank you for taking the time to read this.
We didnt...
Nice try but with the exception of a few notable people like Mendel and Teilhard de Chardin, the Catholic church has been the implacable enemy of scientific progress. Any advances in science that have taken place have been in spite of the Church.
@mikelheron20 Produce examples to back up your claims. If you Google Catholic scientists, you will get pages and pages of examples.
It is true that the Church must introduce an ethical aspect in scientific enquiry. She must also take socio-political realities into account. She is, after all, a body that has responsibilities broader than simply science.
What you did was repeat an old canard about the Catholic Church. Naturally, you produced no evidence.
I, on the other hand, constructed my comment with solid evidence throughout.
@ioannissarelis7281 I'm sorry, but I can't respond to your point because it isn't clear exactly what you mean.
If you scanned down the comment to the end and are responding to my thanking people who read it with a "We didn't," that is not something to brag about. Reading is rather important.
Would that be the catholic church that burned people for heresy if they said the earth revolved around the sun?
That encourager of scientific research and mathematics?
Well-made movie with a good plot that even Sir Authur would have approved.
Max headroom 😂..great actor Matt Frewer
Always loved to read and watch Sherlock 🎩🔍
This is one off the best!🕵♂️❤
Thanks for watching and for the nice comment!
Demeter Street, Renshaw Place :) haha somebody has been reading Dracula, that's for sure...
Where in Dracula do they mention them places ??
@russcooke5671 The Demeter was the name of the ship that Dracula arrived to England aboard. And I may have been confusing Renshaw for Renfield, a character in the story .. ;)
@@sambrown9494 cheers.
Excellent movie ❤
I thoroughly enjoyed it. Thank you 🦇
Enjoyed this...reminded me of stage plays of the early days
max headroom as sherlock, I would've never believed it...
I was trying to place him. Thank you
Someone else pegged it! Well done 😁👍 Have you seen a small budget flick called 'Residue'? Great in that, too.
Yes it's an impressive forehead 😅
@@glensmillie5101 the higher, the Frewer? 😉🤣
@@alistairogilvy7696 hay that's grassed it up brother, poor dude getn too much of a critique!
Yes.
Always.
Always is there room for improvement.
Many men, talented and skillful men, replete upon the task at hand.
It's an interesting.
The United states of America, oh hey there's the reason in Good folk gettn the supreme Court is love folks, the UN and the EU and WEF the World Health Organisation .
It's a loooooong story, ohldis been going on for billions of years.
Amitabha 🙏💖😁
Absolutely brilliant. Thank you. God bless.
Like all other Holmes and Watson adventures this too is a favourite of mine. Both acteurs were outstanding in Hound of the Baskerville, truly enjoyed it!🕵️🕯️🔎
Very good story. Classic Sherlock. Thank you for posting :-)
Super love it❤😊Thank you
Best ever cast. For me.
One of the best. Pure Holmes. Brilliant.
Like this Holmes and Watson.
I found this film really interesting, and I really like the version of Watson played here.
I remember Matt Frewer as Max Headroom on MTV in the 80's.
First thing that came to mind.
Excellent !😄😄😄😄😄😄😄
This is awesome... Brilliant Sherlock at his best
Enjoyable, but I can’t help seeing Matt Frewer in his Star Trek role. Jeremy Brett was the finest Sherlock Holmes in my opinion, closely followed by Basil Rathbone.
If I had a bat I would name it Cricket LOL
Wicket idea 😊
GREAT FILM! Really enjoyed it.
Matt and Kenneth did a damn fine job😅🎉🎉❤❤
This is about the best rendition of Sherlock Holmes I have seen. Matt Frewer is amazing. There is just a flow to the story that keeps you glued to the screen. A 10 out of 10.
Soft and very polite understandable english language in this movie ❤❤
Great story great actors
A classic and the gardening tool is similar to the Sir Basil Rathbone Scarlet Claw film.Very enjoyable and I would put this one up there with the Christopher Plummer/James Mason Jack the Ripper film.
'Holmes,why are you peeling a lemon ?''Lemon entry my dear Watson.....lemon entry....hahaha'
Rathbone and Bruce every time. Peter Cushing a close 2nd.
Thank you
You're welcome!
This is quite good. Do you have also the Hound of the Baskervilles with Frewer as Sherlock? That would be nice to see.
So this is where Fauci got the idea of the bats from 😮
hahaha
Sherlock Holmes🕵🏻♂️ = Jeremy Brett. Period
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is the best!❤
So sad that England will never be the same. A world lost to humanity. Written today, there would be Mosques everywhere.
That made me smile given all the turmoil at present. But I think somehow the spirit of the nation will always be the same. It the geography and island nation that will make it British. Or something like it in the future. ...from Ireland.
I would watch Sherlock from: Mystery on PBS. My father and I would catch such, late nights.
If any Holmes there was to match the author- this is it-
Sherlock Holmes is being played by the actor who played Max Headroom. That's quite a range.
Great version of Holmes
Arthur Conan Doyle was a huge spiritualist and believed in speaking with the dead, and all the shenanigans associated with spiritual charlatanism. He even believed both his wives had medium powers. For Holmes to be written in this way is highly ironic.
I see Hallmark, I watch 😊 0:10
Quite bloody ( excuse the pun) enjoyed it
Waiting for next part
Beautiful
some of the actors' accents have got a tendency to burst out into canadian.
So?
@@David-pn7gh =bad acting.
@@David-pn7ghit's supposed to be set in Whitechapel no?
Reply's deleted ....
@@David-pn7ghit's supposed to be set in Whitechapel
All Love Sherlock Holmes och Dr Watson Very much and Forever ❤❤❤😍😍😍
Matt Frewer is the most underrated of all the Sherlock Holmes actors. In my opinion he is the best one of them all.
Excellent !
Sherlock Holmes and the yellow door.
Its a lemon entry.
This portrays Holmes as too smug, even for Holmes - it's a gross exaggeration. Brett and Hardwicke are the best so far - but, as with the James Bond stories, it would be wonderful if someone could film the original stories faithfully to the book - the worst Holmes films are the takes on 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' - with the exception of the Brett/Hardwicke version - although even in that some of the supporting actors are pretty dire, and there is deviation from the original - e.g. the details about the note compiled by Mrs. Stapleton. Both Ian Fleming and Conan Doyle were superb story tellers, and when film makers try to 'improve' on the plot they produce complete crap.
and he's got a really weird accent
Great
Matt Frewer looks the part but his accent is pure Dick van Dyke.
Absolutely! Spoils it for me.
@@LindaCharles-sg6mz It spoiled it for me, too. It's the director's fault.
He looks the part minus being not handsome enough.
Quite surprised that Scotland Yard would employ a Russian detective inspector at that time, or at least one with a strong Russian accent 😂
I thought that he was Scottish !
@@doriellesoler7502 I think he is supposed to be!! 😂
An amusing Enid Blyton version, best watched supping a couple of glasses of red on a cold Winter's evening. Note to producer....when following villains down a stone paved corridor, FFS kick your leather soled shoes off first. Watson sounded like a herd of wilderbeest.
I was thinking the same. I suppose the sound effects are important for an audience who are already captured.
Don't know why the comments about the English accents !
great movie bat's 🦇 are cute 🙂
The fool has said in his heart, there is no God. This is what the Bible says. So God himself thinks you a fool if you say there is no God.
And If you don't like being called a fool. Take it up with God, and good luck with that.......
Diabolical, and thats just the accents, at one point I expected Dick Van Dyke to jump up and exclaim "lord bless us Mary Poppins" before breaking out dancing to step in time.
Max Headroom, sorry Matt Freuer as Sherlock?
"Blimey guv, he's a rummun and no mistake!"
Brixitttt!
I'm sorry, but I am very spoiled with Jeremy Brent, I find it hard to watch any other Sherlocks. But, I will bare with this 😅
29:00 "Maybe it's bcoz I'm so tall, choice words
but what mister holmes with the cross from the sister when he
tosh it he was afraid we seen it so my dear holmes wat was that?or was it just the licht
What a load of crap. Doyle must be turning over in his grave surrounded by nesting vampire bats.
Doyle, of course, became a fervent spiritualist in later life. Who knows what he would have made of this. Shall we hold a séance and find out?
@@betweenprojects Yes, I've read about Doyle's spiritualism; and some of the original stories do have supernatural overtones. I meant that this story is bad/boring - I don't remember reading this one in the original works - and I thought the actor playing Homes must have never read them; he was just so ... I don't know ... simply not Holmes.
You're over thinking it.
@@betweenprojects Very funny! I rather think it would be their silly fake-dramatic type of speech that would annoy him.
Poor bats to be always blamed for human's ignorance
That cup thing so whenever there's a distraction in Holme's concentration thats the clue is it ?
4 Renfield Place huh?
In missionary the recovery room always downstairs
She' shoulda known better 'just like Fergal Sharky said.
Relentlessly dark, visually. I lost patience with it.
🙏Croatian translation?
The satirical version 1978
Peter cook and dudley moore
The case of the athletes foot!
Not a bad movie. It doesn't have the real creepy atmosphere it's supposed to engender
جميل ولكن من قام بتجسيد شارلوك هولمز لم يكن جيدآ مثل من سبقة بتمثيل ذلك. تحياتي
What accent was Inspector Jones meant to be adopting?!
Is he the famous detective conan, right?
Στο Όνομα του Θεού! Και όλοι οι δαίμονες οπισθοχωρούν και συντρίβονται μπροστά στη δύναμη του Σταυρού
Θα ήθελα να είχα την Πίστη εκείνης της τυφλής μοναχής
Really enjoyed this film
Something funny about the TH-cam algorithm recently
The devil can write on walls? How does he find and use a pen? Ooooooo.....mystery!! Thankfully, Holmes has a brain.
Deze Sherlock doet me denken aan Jim Carrey
dat was Ace Ventura.🤣
Max Headroom