JC, thanks so much for posting these videos. I did not know that they existed (being a West Coast American) and enjoy seeing something new from the 1980s. Guy Henry was just 21 when he was portraying the 17-year old Sherlock. He was quite fine in the role, given the "more Dickens and less ACD', and certainly filled the physical apearance of the younger Holmes brother. Jeremy Brett will always be the definitive and most excellent Sherlock Holmes. He embodied the person whom I imagined the Great Detective to be. While I genuinely love the min-2010-2017 Sherlock for bring us a glimpse of how the Consulting Detective might have been in his early years with John Watson, it is wonderful to have the Victorian Holmes as a reminder of Arthor COnan Doyle brilliance ( of which he so often despaired). Too sad that he thought more of his other works that were not successful, than he did of his masterpiece. Is there anyplace in the world where the words "Sherlock Holmes" are not instantly recognized?
Yes indeed miss, Londoner here, Jeremy did a fine job, but Watson is a difficult part also, Edward Hardwick was a son of acting royalty his dad being Cedric.... But no matter what version I watch... I always think of Mel Brooks and Sheir Luck Holmes 🥰🎭🇺🇸🎭🇬🇧👍🤠⚖️
If you British only knew how lucky you are... imagine growing up in America, where there was only 'Dallas' and 'Baywatch' and 'The Friggin' Love Boat' on every network! 'Hee Haw'! 'Happy Days'! Megachurch operators hawking snake oil! If we hadn't had the one, single public television network that showed a few good British series (and 'American Playhouse' (theater, not Peewee) (and even that folded) I'd have given up on television altogether (hmm...)
+flyinspirals Masterpiece on PBS has had British series for a long time....I watched Poldark way back when....I prefer British productions over the US attempts at classic lit
This is good old British theatre. All stage props and red paint. And who is that funny looking young girl with the Goldilocks plats, my what a programme, weird and wonderful. But thank heavens we moved forward and in time for the wonderful Jeremy Brett, now he is TRUE British Theatre and THE best Sherlock Holmes.
Basil Rathbone was the perfect Holmes but only the first two movies are worth seeing : Hound of the Baskervilles and Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, both set in Victorian times. Then they moved him up to WW2 and had him fighting Nazi spies !
The aunt is actually 100% correct. If people want to live under someone else's roof, they should follow rules. Not looking like crap, not getting the house dirty, and not being late to meals is really very little to ask. And it shouldn't bother anyone if someone thinks they are worth more then you think. If you feel like being a free spirit, that's all good as long as you don't mess up anyone else. But then spend your own money. Don't go begging to others. If anything Sherlock saying his parents didn't do anything shameful is complete bullshit. They went bankrupt. That isn't likely to gain praise.
@@martineshamzin7535 butte the aunt crossed a line by badmouthing Sherlock’s parents in front of him and forbidding Sherlock to talk about them. Also just because something isn’t praiseworthy doesn’t inherently make it shameful.
I think this actor that plays young Sherlock, also 0lays him again in "Mr . Holmes" where he is the flashback Holmes to Sir Ian MCKellan's aging Sherlock!
It's Henrik Hanssen from HOLBY CITY, as Sherlock!!!! =) How FUN!!!! Some of the other actors in this piece are among my most beloved, but I'd not seen him in any other film/TV role.
MissJessyeNorman thanks for revealing this, I knew I recognised him, such a character! Medical treatment thrown in, Touches of the snobbery Jane Austen enjoyed playing with. Lol
Roger Lucas I like your comment, since she is often accused of snobbery herself, a description she would not probably have totally denied, in any case.
The strangest thing just came to mind watching this: Jack the Ripper vs. Sherlock Holmes. Now, Sherlock is a fictional character created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, while Jack was real. His 5 most famous murders all occurred in 1888 in or around the part of London known as the 'Square Mile' (London proper), an area Doyle was familiar with. Doyle published his first novel in 1890. He became so good at writing crime mysteries that he was occasionally contacted by various local authorities and even Scotland Yard to help solve cases or at least provide some fresh insight. Unfortunately, Sir Arthur was a devout spiritualist who would have given as much credence to a crystal ball as he would a fingerprint. But if he had actually existed, Holmes would have been around 34 in 1888, in his prime and at the top of his career as a private detective. Baker Street is less than 5 miles from the center of London. Jack the Ripper was sloppy, very sloppy. Sloppiness was practically his signature. Holmes would have caught him easily, right after or perhaps even during the second murder, thus preventing the rest. It would have been no trouble at all for him. The real problem was that the Yard was even sloppier than Jack was, so sloppy they would clean up crime scenes before they did their investigations! "What? Do your job and wash all that blood away first, man! How am I to be expected to find anything in all this mess?! Thus, there must be a clear dividing line between fantasy and reality. The most brilliant 'fictional' criminologist of his age believed in parlor magic, ghosts, spirits and seances and there is nothing in any of his works that comes anywhere close to the sheer gruesomeness and brutality of Jack's killings, which remain among the greatest unsolved crimes in modern history, although Patricia Cornwell's theory is probably the correct one.The Ripper fascinates us in the same way Hitler and Ted Bundy do, as a practical incarnation of pure evil, a thing quite beyond our common understanding but still intrinsically human. I must presume that Doyle was well aware of Jack's existence but not necessarily vica-versa, per se. Maybe, you never know. For those who have read this far, I propose that Jack (aka the artist formerly known as Walter Sickert) must have had a particular impact on Doyle, whether either knew it or not, but probably not the other way around. And therefore I must deduce that the character of Sherlock Holmes is either directly or indirectly inspired by the reality of Jack the Ripper! Don't ask how I came to that conclusion, Watson, I will explain later. Right now, the game is afoot...
In England, it's illegal to impersonate an Indian from India. Curious fact: that is one of the 19 public crimes that can get you shipped off to Australia...
th-cam.com/video/JJIRu2pDE3I/w-d-xo.html Also (Spoiler) in first episode of "The Murder Rooms" young Arthur Conan Doyle and his mentor are chasing a serial killer who escapes to America (?), but possibly will return to Britain to resume his murders. The gruesome killings are practically shouting "Ted Jack".
Warning the last several episodes are not complete, sound is bad, continuity is broken, no clear ending. Sorry. Its miserable watching the first episode then to be let down.
That's it! I couldn't put my finger on it, but, now that you mention it, this production does smack of Dickens. That includes, I'm sorry to say, the two-dimensional nature of the characters (e.g., either good or bad, no shades of gray).
Yes, I agree, right from the beginning. And a bit of Harry Potters foster parents. But we prob have "high" expectations because of so many really good series available. 😉
Right you are. Although I understand what Oscar Wilde meant when he said England was the land of the hypocrite. That scheming brat noising about Holme's belongings then feigning fear as she tattletaled to her mother is a prime example.
What about Sherlock's brother? I seem to recall that Sherlock at the end of his career stated that his mother had an affair with his Nemesis and his father killed himself over that?
Imagine growing up in South Africa where we didn’t even have TV, and when we got it in the late seventies, we were boycotted by everyone, so had nothing to watch anyway. Don’t blame me.
@@susanaaragorn8606 Unfortunately, we were boycotted by the British as well, which was entirely within their rights. Anyway, at least we can have the pleasure of listening to them now.
This is fiction, it is set in England, in the second half of the 19th century, but I swear, as far as the attitudes, prejudices and behavior of the people (especially the aunt and "brother Gideon"), it could be south Georgia in the 1950s- thru the present day.
I see now why it never aired in the US. It is one of those British shows where the exteriors are shot on film but interiors are on video, which is very jarring and difficult to watch.
WARNING: As of 8/29/2018 the first few videos are good, the rest are a hash of jumbled recordings that are out of sequence. We don’t get to complete the story based upon this person’s posts.
Simple rules of narrative: If the story is being related by Sherlock you cannot include scenes at which he is not present and about which he has no knowledge.
Are my eyes deceiving me or didn't Natty Dan's writting on the wall look like "OLD MR"? I don't understand why they are saying, "old mo". Anyone know why or did I see it wrong?
RON776 Who is that, pray tell? There have been so many & all but Jeremy Brett, NOT as written by Conan Doyle. They did the same w The Young Morse. Can’t warm up to him either, tho’ his acting’s good.
The old doc smelling the bandage then giving the derisive look to the younger doctor? I wonder if he smelled some type of disinfectant and was thinking these youngins don't know anything? What was that all about?
davehshs is right. This is too much like a Dickens novel. It's not how I imagined Sherlock's younger years. Disappointing really. The screenwriter has never read the original stories.
+filmcrazy2008 to be fair its a kids TV show- and its hardly further from the books then my personal favorite Holmes Basil Rathbone :) Sorry you didn't like it, Jermemy Brett was the Truest to the books portrayal I think.
+filmcrazy2008 Thanks for the warning. Never seen it. I'd like to hope it encouraged kids to read the original stories. But maybe not, if they ended up disappointed because it's not how they imagined Sherlock's older years...
***** The kids will come to read them if they LIKE Holmes in any form... as older kids will go back to favorites they liked when younger I loved the old Rathbone Holmes for years and years before I read the books.. the issue with the stories is sadly that many kids don't have the vocabulary to deal with them- that's an issue of public education though.
Well, I hope so. I loved my hand-me-down Nancy Drew books from the 40s/50s/60s, but I've never seen any film adaptation of her that I can stand, and I think it might work both ways. Hope I'm wrong : )
moi je crois TH-cam ne comprend le français ,quand je demandes un feuilleton en version française il a met en anglais ou sont les séries de Sherlock Holmes en français merci
Mister, can you speak a single word properly from any eastern languages. Still today you Anglo Saxons are not able to shit properly after all the looted pleasures from India. Today India is not a country of snake charmer, it is country of digitized technology, software technology, best doctors, teachers, pharmaceutical companies.that is me a proud Indian, not a Rudyard Kipling of sort.
@@jagdishacharya1438 what fowl language that shows off your ignorance - must be a lower caste! Have family friends from India & they lament the poor medical treatment that is pretty much free for all - I guess one gets what one pays for - and the best doctors of Indian descent go to the USA to practice!
AWESOME!!! Nice to watch something clever. I simply can not stomach any more of the woke crap on tv at the moment. It's so dull, predictable, and preachy. If they made it today, Sherlock would be gay, the Indian servant would be the hero, and everyone else would be the villain.
Thanks . I remember this as a child and so looked forward to it. Happy times
SO GLAD I stumbled upon these! 💖
JC, thanks so much for posting these videos. I did not know that they existed (being a West Coast American) and enjoy seeing something new from the 1980s. Guy Henry was just 21 when he was portraying the 17-year old Sherlock. He was quite fine in the role, given the "more Dickens and less ACD', and certainly filled the physical apearance of the younger Holmes brother.
Jeremy Brett will always be the definitive and most excellent Sherlock Holmes. He embodied the person whom I imagined the Great Detective to be. While I genuinely love the min-2010-2017 Sherlock for bring us a glimpse of how the Consulting Detective might have been in his early years with John Watson, it is wonderful to have the Victorian Holmes as a reminder of Arthor COnan Doyle brilliance ( of which he so often despaired).
Too sad that he thought more of his other works that were not successful, than he did of his masterpiece. Is there anyplace in the world where the words "Sherlock Holmes" are not instantly recognized?
Sherrill Smith I esp agree w you about Jeremy Brett. He really is the Holmes described by Conan Doyle in his enthralling novels.
Yes indeed miss, Londoner here, Jeremy did a fine job, but Watson is a difficult part also, Edward Hardwick was a son of acting royalty his dad being Cedric.... But no matter what version I watch... I always think of Mel Brooks and
Sheir Luck Holmes 🥰🎭🇺🇸🎭🇬🇧👍🤠⚖️
I. Agree. About. Jeremy Brett
Great to see this is to be found on TH-cam. I loved it when it was originally shown and am enjoying watching it now.
If you British only knew how lucky you are... imagine growing up in America, where there was only 'Dallas' and 'Baywatch' and 'The Friggin' Love Boat' on every network! 'Hee Haw'! 'Happy Days'! Megachurch operators hawking snake oil! If we hadn't had the one, single public television network that showed a few good British series (and 'American Playhouse' (theater, not Peewee) (and even that folded) I'd have given up on television altogether (hmm...)
+flyinspirals Masterpiece on PBS has had British series for a long time....I watched Poldark way back when....I prefer British productions over the US attempts at classic lit
its hard to make a classic history piece in a country that has no history
USA television has definitely gone downhill.
They could do better however. Surely there is intelligent creativity somewhere. (I hope)
flyinspirals Yes well we had Star Trek too
Thanks for posting. It’s a gem.
TY for posting this, not seen it before.
This is good old British theatre. All stage props and red paint. And who is that funny looking young girl with the Goldilocks plats, my what a programme, weird and wonderful. But thank heavens we moved forward and in time for the wonderful Jeremy Brett, now he is TRUE British Theatre and THE best Sherlock Holmes.
Brett good but no match for Rathbone or Howard.
Basil Rathbone was the perfect Holmes but only the first two movies are worth seeing : Hound of the Baskervilles and Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, both set in Victorian times. Then they moved him up to WW2 and had him fighting Nazi spies !
Indeed weird and wonderful! but might I just say, we are not amused! eh what...
Brett was the most appalling over acting old ham. I used to cringe at the sight of him.
Sir B. R.WAS the best. But in our times,Bret seems more to "our"modern"faulty habits,more to our shame.......
Tremendous acting and great role of the local natterer! Or newsbearer. The entire show is satirical and enjoyable play on words.
Cheers From your Newest subscriber In California 😊
"What a truly nauseous child" I love it!
He wasn’t wrong though 🤣🤣🤣
I was a truly nauseous child, literally
He isn't trying too hard to fit in, is he? He is late for the first meal.
Nice. Another series I had not seen or even heard of before. Thanks for uploading s nice audible copy of it.
Thank you very much! 5 stars
2023😊
Thanks for sharing these videos ❤
Unfortunately, I have met people like his so-called aunt! So deluded about their own worth!
The aunt is actually 100% correct. If people want to live under someone else's roof, they should follow rules. Not looking like crap, not getting the house dirty, and not being late to meals is really very little to ask. And it shouldn't bother anyone if someone thinks they are worth more then you think. If you feel like being a free spirit, that's all good as long as you don't mess up anyone else. But then spend your own money. Don't go begging to others. If anything Sherlock saying his parents didn't do anything shameful is complete bullshit. They went bankrupt. That isn't likely to gain praise.
@@martineshamzin7535 butte the aunt crossed a line by badmouthing Sherlock’s parents in front of him and forbidding Sherlock to talk about them. Also just because something isn’t praiseworthy doesn’t inherently make it shameful.
Well, the kid also does not behave.
Thank you very much
I think this actor that plays young Sherlock, also 0lays him again in "Mr . Holmes" where he is the flashback Holmes to Sir Ian MCKellan's aging Sherlock!
No, that's Nicholas Rowe from the film Young Sherlock. This is Guy Henry.
Mr. Collins from Lost in Austen having a run-in with Mr. Tom Bertram from Mansfield Park! lol
Good gracious--Holmes was once young!
NICE
It's Henrik Hanssen from HOLBY CITY, as Sherlock!!!! =) How FUN!!!! Some of the other actors in this piece are among my most beloved, but I'd not seen him in any other film/TV role.
MissJessyeNorman thanks for revealing this, I knew I recognised him, such a character! Medical treatment thrown in, Touches of the snobbery Jane Austen enjoyed playing with. Lol
Good grief, you’re right - Guy Henry!! 😳😳😂😂
Roger Lucas I like your comment, since she is often accused of snobbery herself, a description she would not probably have totally denied, in any case.
The strangest thing just came to mind watching this: Jack the Ripper vs. Sherlock Holmes. Now, Sherlock is a fictional character created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, while Jack was real. His 5 most famous murders all occurred in 1888 in or around the part of London known as the 'Square Mile' (London proper), an area Doyle was familiar with. Doyle published his first novel in 1890. He became so good at writing crime mysteries that he was occasionally contacted by various local authorities and even Scotland Yard to help solve cases or at least provide some fresh insight. Unfortunately, Sir Arthur was a devout spiritualist who would have given as much credence to a crystal ball as he would a fingerprint.
But if he had actually existed, Holmes would have been around 34 in 1888, in his prime and at the top of his career as a private detective. Baker Street is less than 5 miles from the center of London. Jack the Ripper was sloppy, very sloppy. Sloppiness was practically his signature. Holmes would have caught him easily, right after or perhaps even during the second murder, thus preventing the rest. It would have been no trouble at all for him. The real problem was that the Yard was even sloppier than Jack was, so sloppy they would clean up crime scenes before they did their investigations! "What? Do your job and wash all that blood away first, man! How am I to be expected to find anything in all this mess?!
Thus, there must be a clear dividing line between fantasy and reality. The most brilliant 'fictional' criminologist of his age believed in parlor magic, ghosts, spirits and seances and there is nothing in any of his works that comes anywhere close to the sheer gruesomeness and brutality of Jack's killings, which remain among the greatest unsolved crimes in modern history, although Patricia Cornwell's theory is probably the correct one.The Ripper fascinates us in the same way Hitler and Ted Bundy do, as a practical incarnation of pure evil, a thing quite beyond our common understanding but still intrinsically human.
I must presume that Doyle was well aware of Jack's existence but not necessarily vica-versa, per se. Maybe, you never know. For those who have read this far, I propose that Jack (aka the artist formerly known as Walter Sickert) must have had a particular impact on Doyle, whether either knew it or not, but probably not the other way around.
And therefore I must deduce that the character of Sherlock Holmes is either directly or indirectly inspired by the reality of Jack the Ripper!
Don't ask how I came to that conclusion, Watson, I will explain later. Right now, the game is afoot...
Bring your pistol...
Now ask me who killed JFK?
In England, it's illegal to impersonate an Indian from India.
Curious fact: that is one of the 19 public crimes that can get you shipped off to Australia...
th-cam.com/video/JJIRu2pDE3I/w-d-xo.html
Also (Spoiler)
in first episode of "The Murder Rooms" young Arthur Conan Doyle and his mentor are chasing a serial killer who escapes to America (?), but possibly will return to Britain to resume his murders. The gruesome killings are practically shouting "Ted Jack".
Warning the last several episodes are not complete, sound is bad, continuity is broken, no clear ending. Sorry. Its miserable watching the first episode then to be let down.
I think this is enjoyably like watching a college play. I like the quirkiness.
I agree. The acting is a little off but otherwise I think it's good.
The uncle is shoveling food in his mouth, like a stevedore loading a grain ship.
What an amazing movie ! It gave my pet Ebola virus a severe case of Herpes ! Now I use it as an adjunct to all my therapeutic malpractices !
This series was posted with 8 sections except that #8 is no where to be found.
Those three proverbs at the start I must have heard a 1000 times from my late mother.
You were lucky to have a really good, caring, old fashioned parent. I had two worthless academic free spirits.
Please...
thank you again
The screenwriter has read too much Dickens and not enough Conan Doyle.
+davehshs Rubbsh more like a good repeat a good blend of the two!
That's it! I couldn't put my finger on it, but, now that you mention it, this production does smack of Dickens. That includes, I'm sorry to say, the two-dimensional nature of the characters (e.g., either good or bad, no shades of gray).
Yes, I agree, right from the beginning. And a bit of Harry Potters foster parents. But we prob have "high" expectations because of so many really good series available. 😉
rite indeed
Right you are. Although I understand what Oscar Wilde meant when he said England was the land of the hypocrite. That scheming brat noising about Holme's belongings then feigning fear as she tattletaled to her mother is a prime example.
I really enjoyed this 😇
Me to :'D
Ah, the deerstalker hat! Sydney Paget's signature.
What about Sherlock's brother?
I seem to recall that Sherlock at the end of his career stated that his mother had an affair with his Nemesis and his father killed himself over that?
Yeah, where’s Mycroft?
@@sandraelder1101he is in France with the rest of the family
Imagine growing up in South Africa where we didn’t even have TV, and when we got it in the late seventies, we were boycotted by everyone, so had nothing to watch anyway. Don’t blame me.
I don’t even need to imagine it. I am South African too and lived through this time.
But I suppose you still were able to watch British series?
I'm afraid not.
@@susanaaragorn8606 Unfortunately, we were boycotted by the British as well, which was entirely within their rights. Anyway, at least we can have the pleasure of listening to them now.
@@rosainecalmeyer4428 Unfortunately? Did the majority of white people was in concordance with Apartheid?
Holmes kicked Watson out and wrote his own book
Sherlock Holmes descriptive narrative is original
This is fiction, it is set in England, in the second half of the 19th century, but I swear, as far as the attitudes, prejudices and behavior of the people (especially the aunt and "brother Gideon"), it could be south Georgia in the 1950s- thru the present day.
I see now why it never aired in the US. It is one of those British shows where the exteriors are shot on film but interiors are on video, which is very jarring and difficult to watch.
I like the way this was filmed FAMU Prague.
I was excited about seeing this but is very dry. I'll watch them though
After 7:30minutes it's become the case of the disappearing me.
haha gud 1 Lawry
Bye Felicia
So many delightful kinder eggs 😁😁😁
26:10 the actress's name was zuleika robson. Where is she now?
Ref: Spoiled Little Girl. Does anyone else see a resemblance to the little girl in the old movie, The Bad Seed. Looks like Patty McCormack.
WARNING: As of 8/29/2018 the first few videos are good, the rest are a hash of jumbled recordings that are out of sequence. We don’t get to complete the story based upon this person’s posts.
Simple rules of narrative: If the story is being related by Sherlock you cannot include scenes at which he is not present and about which he has no knowledge.
Chris Villiers was hilarious in the Top Secret spoof :)
Are my eyes deceiving me or didn't Natty Dan's writting on the wall look like "OLD MR"? I don't understand why they are saying, "old mo". Anyone know why or did I see it wrong?
Looked like MR, at a quick glance. Think that it was an O, with a tail above it. Remember that he was dying as he tried to leave that clue.
I'll stick to old Sherlock Holmes!
RON776 Who is that, pray tell? There have been so many & all but Jeremy Brett, NOT as written by Conan Doyle. They did the same w The Young Morse. Can’t warm up to him either, tho’ his acting’s good.
The old doc smelling the bandage then giving the derisive look to the younger doctor? I wonder if he smelled some type of disinfectant and was thinking these youngins don't know anything? What was that all about?
No, I don't think I'll bother. Lasted 7 minutes.
love this
the brother seems unnaturally fond of his sister......holmes is too daft....
davehshs is right. This is too much like a Dickens novel. It's not how I imagined Sherlock's younger years. Disappointing really. The screenwriter has never read the original stories.
+filmcrazy2008 to be fair its a kids TV show- and its hardly further from the books then my personal favorite Holmes Basil Rathbone :) Sorry you didn't like it, Jermemy Brett was the Truest to the books portrayal I think.
+filmcrazy2008 Thanks for the warning. Never seen it. I'd like to hope it encouraged kids to read the original stories. But maybe not, if they ended up disappointed because it's not how they imagined Sherlock's older years...
***** The kids will come to read them if they LIKE Holmes in any form... as older kids will go back to favorites they liked when younger
I loved the old Rathbone Holmes for years and years before I read the books.. the issue with the stories is sadly that many kids don't have the vocabulary to deal with them- that's an issue of public education though.
Well, I hope so. I loved my hand-me-down Nancy Drew books from the 40s/50s/60s, but I've never seen any film adaptation of her that I can stand, and I think it might work both ways. Hope I'm wrong : )
@@tpenny4816 .......There are always dictionaries if anyone remembers how to use one or their purpose!
8:55 into it is as much as I can bear. Farewell Manor House. Mozzman.
MRS. HUDSON!!! :D :D
Yeah, Mrs Hudson
Where's the end?
WARNING!!!! THIS IS 8 PART SERIES AND PART 8 NOT AVAILABLE!!!!
gdze jest lektor???????????????????????????
26 yrs ago, & nothing since. Look at San Fransico now.
He got the shot clot
warning to viewers: this ragged show never resolves, runs on forever. don't waste your time as i did, expecting in vain an answer, a solution. shame!
Van Rozay....everyone is entitled to their opinion! Thank goodness! If, we all thought the same, life would be extremely boring and so tedious!
Except,if YOU HAVE time to waist, plenty of it............unfortunately.
Irene 1943 to waste. 🤓
@@Irene-iu9sj I agree. I only changed your "waisted" to "wasted". 🎓👓💼
I love these movies
Can this be found on dvd?
I saw that Amazon had it, you should check again and see.
moi je crois TH-cam ne comprend le français ,quand je demandes un feuilleton en version française il a met en anglais ou sont les séries de Sherlock Holmes en français merci
Pascal
desole' madmoiselle...
Very much a stage production, verbosity and emoting abounding. Takes a certain mood to abide, which, unfortunately, I do not, presently, possess
OMG! This is a thing?!?
where is Mycroft
Why ask about Mycroft? How many times has he shown up In Sherlock movies anyway?
@@MrLyndarenaud bc is a movie about the family and their past??????????????????
Such classy people the Upper Class Brits are
Sound too LOW
"This" young "Sherlock?" Where did they find this dork?
Was SH.H.,really that tal? ????certainly had not those awful eye -braws. ...., or that curly hair? ?????couldn't at least correct THAT. .......
Sherlock is a dork and a nerd, so, he might fit the role well if you give him a chance old chap.
Looking at your picture, Dennis, I am surprised that you'd make a remark like that???
I lasted all of three minutes watching this! 🙈🙈🙈
danivarius Good for you! 🏆🏅🎖
En français merci
Traduzca, please en Argentina hablamos castellano, entendido Gracias
I think not.
wot i wrote? fantastic!
am I the only one who's made the connection
no, I enjoyed it also.
а можно с русским переводом?
Просто подумайте о Чехове и добавьте немного криминала. Все добрые пожелания из Англии, Елена!
Good grief, could they make SH any more boring?
Get lost
I wanna full movie
Manor House wicked !?
ranjeeth man in a fake tan barley Indian
Is Australian
Was also the narrator at the beginning of each episode
BBC could not find a Indian actor then?
MISSING conclusion part 6.
Granada Land revisited :oD
Да . С субтитрами намного понятнее ..
This is the most boring and toothless version of Sherlock Holmes I have ever seen :(
toothless - lmao I'd call it half-arsed :o)
Yes Sherlock needs to have some rough edges like the Bret or Cumerbatch version-
Gert Madsen Brett.
David Copperfield Holmes. Didn't last 2 minutes.
go no further, part 5 is faulty
Como passar para portugues
Musik awAl mirip makhluk paling sexi dewa.
Graba daska slurty elewqatena!
Wrong hat
I got as far as the Indian speaking and lost the will to live!
Mister, can you speak a single word properly from any eastern languages. Still today you Anglo Saxons are not able to shit properly after all the looted pleasures from India. Today India is not a country of snake charmer, it is country of digitized technology, software technology, best doctors, teachers, pharmaceutical companies.that is me a proud Indian, not a Rudyard Kipling of sort.
@@jagdishacharya1438 what fowl language that shows off your ignorance - must be a lower caste! Have family friends from India & they lament the poor medical treatment that is pretty much free for all - I guess one gets what one pays for - and the best doctors of Indian descent go to the USA to practice!
What an obnoxious young man at 30:00.
AWESOME!!! Nice to watch something clever. I simply can not stomach any more of the woke crap on tv at the moment. It's so dull, predictable, and preachy. If they made it today, Sherlock would be gay, the Indian servant would be the hero, and everyone else would be the villain.
Sherlock would be a transgender Morphin in and out of either gender, Watson would be gay!
There were no indian actors? They look so fake! It's a shame!
Baaark!!! ce n est pas en francais... sniffff :'(
+FichDichInDemArsch TG
+FichDichInDemArsch
Csine
@FichDichInDemArsch ......I pity you!
The uncle is such an awful man, lol.
Christopher Villiers is overacting.
get a white person to play ranjith
what a load of rubbish
One word - Crap.
Robert Hickson That is elegantly put criticism.