I remember when the Jeremy Brett series was coming out, my wife watched them religiously and loved them. But I refused to watch them because they were too modern. Now I look back on them nostalgically and watch them -- and they are quite good.
I agree! Jeremy Brett IS Sherlock Holmes, his voice, his mannerisms, everything, he was simply perfect for the part, as if Arthur Conan Doyle had Brett in mind, when he wrote S.H. But Peter Cushing is an awesome actor and played S.H. almost as perfect as Brett. Its sad, that Cushing is rarely ever mentioned, when it comes to S.H. actors.
Peter Cushing is Sherlock! As a matter of fact-Peter Cushing is everyone he plays. No matter who plays the role, or what version..I liked Watson actor too.
How nice to see Ballard Berkeley of Fawlty Towers fame play a sensible character with gravitas. He played the balmy Major so well, you would almost think he wasn't acting.
These were made before I knew anything of literature and British, spectacular, television. Wonderful indeed. I love Doyle and Sherlock Holmes. I was 9, then.
I think my favorite has to be when the moose head is on the check in counter top and Manuel is hidden "tidying up", then carries out a moose to befuddled man conversation with the Major. I think it was The Germans episode.
Last scene sequence is really superb acting and direction. Mr Stock was fabulous in it. Just make you feel that you are watching a horror story. Perfect I must say.
I agree he's good, and I am only discovering him now. Not quite sure yet how I am going to rank him against Jeremy Brett (whom I hitherto considered _the_ Holmes), but Cushing does have an elegance and sharpness that lends itself very well to the character. All in all not a bad production at all.
Being an older person, my favorite Holmes and Watson are Rathbone and Bruce. However, I enjoy any well-acted Holmes movie, and of course, this presentation starring Cushing and Stock is very entertaining and well done.🎉🎉🎉
Those who have played Sherlock Holmes since 1893: Charles Brookfield - 1893 William Gillette - 1899-1929 - 1300 Performances over 30 yrs. Sherlock Holmes movie Baffled - 1900 Silent/Short - Max Goldberg John F. Preston - 1900 Charles Rice - 1904 Karoly Baumann - 1905 Maurice Costello - 1905 Viggo Larsen - 1908 Alwin NeuB - 1908, 1911, 1914 Otto Lagoni - 1910 Holger Rasmussen - 1911 Mack Sennett - 1911-1912 James Bragington - 1914 Hugo Flink - 1917 Sam Robinson - 1918 Eille Norwood - 1921 Silent short movie - The Dying Detective Burt Lytell - 1921 George Treville - 1912 Harry Benham - 1913 Francis Ford - 1914 H.A. Saintbury - 1916 Dennis Neillson-Terry - 1921 John Barrymore - 1922 Hamilton Deane - 1923-1932 Tod Slaughter - 1928, 1930 Richard Gordon - 1930 Clive Brook - 1929/1930/1932 Arthur Wontner - 1931- 1937 - Movie Series Raymond Massey - 1931 Robert Rendel - 1931/1932 Reginald Owen - 1933 Felix Alymer - 1933 Louis Hector - 1934-1935, 1937 Bruno Guttner - 1937, 1939, 1942-1943 Orson Welles - 1938 Basil Rathbone - 1939-1946 Cedric Hardwick - 1945 Tom Conway - 1947 Howard Marion-Crawford - 1948 John Stanley - 1948-1949 Alan Napier - 1949 John Longden - 1951 Carleton Hobbs - 1952-1969 Ronald Howard - 1954 (39 episodes) Sir John Gielgud - 1954-1955 Christopher Lee - 1962, 1970, 1992 Douglas Wilmer - 1964 Peter Cushing - 1959, 1968, 1984 John Neville - 1965, 1970, 1992 Robert Stephens - 1970 Stewart Granger - 1972 John Neville - 1973 John Cleese - 1973 Larry Hagman - 1974 Robert Powell - 1974 Leonard Nimoy - 1976 Kevin McCarthy - 1977 Roger Moore - 1976 Nicol Williamson - 1976 Christopher Plummer - 1977 Peter Cook - 1977 Paxton Whitehead - 1978 Geoffrey Whitehead - 1979-1980 Keith Mitchell - 1979 Charlton Heston - 1980 Frank Langella - 1980 Vasily Livanov - Russian TV - 1979-1981, 1983 & 1986 John Moffatt - 1981 Guy Henry - 1982 Tom Baker - 1982 Peter O’Toole - 1983 Ian Richardson - 1983 Jeremy Brett - 1984-1994 Nicholas Rowe - 1984 Tim Pigott-Smith - 1987 Dinsdale Landen - 1987 Anthony Higgins - 1987 Robert Rees - 1988 Ron Moody - 1988-1989 Clive Merrison - 1989-1998, 2002, 2004, 2008-2010 Edward Woodward - 1990 Richard E. Grant 1992 Robert Powell - 1993 1998-2019: John Gilbert - Episodes 1-18 Lawrence Albert - Episode 20 John Patrick Lowrie - Episodes 21-65 & 67-current Dennis Bateman - Episode 66 Jason Gray-Stanford - 1999-2001 - Animation for Kids Matt Frewer - 2000-2001 Joaquim de Almeida - 2001 Richard Roxburgh - 2002 James D’Arcy - 2002 Andrew Sachs - 2004 Rupert Everett - 2004 Jonathan Pryce - 2007 Javier Marzan - 2007 Roger Llewellyn - 2009 Ben Syder - 2010 Nicholas Briggs - 2010-2018 Johnny Lee Miller - 2012-2019 Benjamin Lawlor - 2013 Igor Petrenko - Russian TV Series - 2013 Robert Downey Jr. 2009 & 2011 Benedict Cumberbatch - 2010-2016 Nicholas Briggs - 2010-2018 Christian Rode - 2010, 2014 Seamus Dever - 2014 Ian McKellen - 2015 Euan Morton - 2015 Gregory Wooddell - 2015 Paul Andrew Goldsmith - 2015-2016 Ewen Bremner - 2016 Jay Taylor - 2017-2018 Yuko Takeuchi - 2018 (HBO Asia - female ‘Holmes’) Orlando Wells - 2018 Samuel Tady - 2011, 2014, 2017-2018 (Tady Bros. Productions/on YTube) Johnny Depp - 2018 (animation) Will Ferrell - 2018 Nicholas Boulton - 2020 Henry Cavill - 2020 Ethan Bell - 2020 (Fan Film on TH-cam) Ethan Thomas Jung - 2020 Fan Adv. (Vagabond Repertory Theater Company-TH-cam) This list is not exhaustive. however, these are some of the many actors who have played Sherlock Holmes on stage, screen, radio and TV adaptations.
Any chance you could update this telling us which medium each performed in? I’ve never seen/heard some of these and I’d be interested in tracking them down.
Brett and Hardwicke are for most of us, I think, the most convincing Holmes and Watson to date but Cushing is always compelling and does an excellent Holmes here aided by Stock as his faithful sidekick.
@@KG-ro8ft The Rathbone/Bruce adaptations were too American for my taste. I'm afraid even tough both actors were 'british' ( neither were actually born in the UK ) they were spoilt by being made in Hollywood. I'm afraid Americans can't do British. Bruce's portrayal of Watson also made the character come across as a dithering/ bumbling fool. The Brett/ Hardwicke portrayals are by far the best, but I'd agree that Cushing/Stock make a very good combination.
David Burke and Edward Hardwick both made great Watsons, but Jeremy Brett portrayed Holmes like a theatre actor from the 19th Century. Interesting, but far to theatrical for my taste.
It's sad to read that Cushing didn't like the series and the way it turned out. These episodes are actually quite faithful to the books (bar some edits to the stories like when and how they met, and in the Study in Scarlet the explanation of why Jefferson Hope killed his two victims)
Peter Cushing is Awesome thanks for sharing this, what was the hound doing at baskerville hall at the end of part Bless Dr Watson that scared him I thought Stapleton has It kept in the disused mine? why didn't it attack Barry more?
That any doctor living in London of that day should not immediately associate the initials "C.C.H." with Charing Cross Hospital beggars belief. Still a great novel and adaptation.
I really don't understand why Dr Watson is portrayed as elderly and / or foolish in most Sherlock Holmes adaptions. The novels and short stories suggest that he is a good-natured, caring man who very clearly loves women and manages to find himself a young wife in one of the early episodes. His softness and sensitivity certainly blind him to people's criminal energies, and he is often distracted by outer appearances, that doesn't make him stupid. One thing the latest BBC adaptions with Benedict Cumberbatch got right was that they made Dr Watson fairly attractive. It's annoying that many other films have shown Watson as Holmes's inferior on so many levels... including manners and looks.
I think Nigel Bruce started that tradition, but no Watson since has been as bad as his portrayal. Typical of Hollywood of the time, to completely misrepresent a famous British fictional character. Just as they did with a real character, Lt Bligh until Sir Anthony Hopkins redressed the story somewhat.
Typical Hollywood convention of the comic sidekick. As has been pointed out, Nigel Bruce bumbled, but bumbled charmingly and retaining Bruce's Watson for Rathbone's Holmes returned him to his proper status as partner after the trend of filming Holmes stories with Watson removed.
David Farley Oh I like some of Bruce's earliest portrayals of Watson, especially in the Twentieth Century Fox film 'The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' (1939) some of them could be kind of charming I'll admit, Just for me however when Universal took over the Rathbone / Bruce Holmes films and put Holmes in the WW2 era Bruce's bumbling Watson really grew forced and rather grating in his pure idiocy IMHO and for me could never rank of there with Edward Hardwick among other Watsons as far as being faithful to the Canon goes.
Absolutely beautiful production, they did wonderful with what must have been a limited budget. It doesn't look cheap. And it's so good to see accurate casting, not like today where they have to shoehorn in anomalous characters (for diversity that never existed) that take me right out of the fantasy of the production.
Many have done......The one that spring's to mind is T.E Laurence.(of Arabia) His memoir the 7 pillars of wisdom was compussive reading for all u.s. officers going to do the tour in the middle east.
Gary Raymond as the younger Baskerville. Raymond better known for his role in the TV series, The Rat Patrol. The role of Sir Charles Baskerville is played by Ballard Berkeley, who is possibly better known today for his role as The Major in the TV series, Fawlty Towers
I think the scene of Doctor Watson's group arriving at the country train station was filmed on the south Devon railway. the country train station looks familar
Cushing is always so faultless. This was obviously a low budget production so it's unfair to compare really, I prefer the Basil Rathbone version. A timeless classic
Peter Cook and dudley moore 1978 version takes the prize Of being a not too serious one! And without a clue comes a close second In real life many murders aren't solved!
A bizarre production with some odd directing choices but it has a few good moments of note. The tale comes alive in the outdoor locations. Why the BBC couldn't make the interiors more than just a stage play is baffling; budgetary constraints I imagine
Personally I think Peter Cushing played Holmes far more akin to the stories than any other actor. I love Baz/Nige and Brett/Burke/Hardwicke but Cushing really got into the skin of the character, especially in the Hammer version of this, despite it being nothing like the novel. Who’s the actress playing Beryl here? She’s dreadful.
I totally agree with you ie yu are totally correct i believe cushing is a fantastic Holmes ie brett was excellent but I think sometimes he over cooked it with over dramatic antics
“Do you have your service revolver Watson?”... because even Holmes knew how important the right to protect ones life is, even outside the home. One would think Chicago is the safest place on earth with their strict gun laws...
Couldn't disagree more! If you read the books, Holmes is always thinking while speaking. The pauses are his thinking ahead and he doesn't reveal all of his thoughts during a conversation. Cushing did it perfectly!! ;-)
WOW so Cushing filmed Hound twice, once in 1959, the Hammer film, and this one for the BBC series in 68.
I am a Jeremy Brett devotee, but Peter Cushing plays SH beautifully. Such a dignified actor.
I remember when the Jeremy Brett series was coming out, my wife watched them religiously and loved them. But I refused to watch them because they were too modern. Now I look back on them nostalgically and watch them -- and they are quite good.
I agree! Jeremy Brett IS Sherlock Holmes, his voice, his mannerisms, everything, he was simply perfect for the part, as if Arthur Conan Doyle had Brett in mind, when he wrote S.H.
But Peter Cushing is an awesome actor and played S.H. almost as perfect as Brett. Its sad, that Cushing is rarely ever mentioned, when it comes to S.H. actors.
Me too and I agree.
Yes Brett for me was by far the best Holmes.
Yyyyyyyyyyyyy6y66❤
I enjoyed this version so much. Thank you very much. Much love from Arkansas, USA
You would recognise the hogs on the coat of arms!
Peter Cushing was an excellent actor. Just a joy to watch
Peter Cushing is Sherlock! As a matter of fact-Peter Cushing is everyone he plays. No matter who plays the role, or what version..I liked Watson actor too.
Nigel Stock (The Great Escape, Night of the Generals..)
I saw this as a kid and was terrified at it...... my introduction to Sherlock Holmes.
How nice to see Ballard Berkeley of Fawlty Towers fame play a sensible character with gravitas. He played the balmy Major so well, you would almost think he wasn't acting.
Peter cushing wad a fantastic actor may he Rest in peace
These were made before I knew anything of literature and British, spectacular, television. Wonderful indeed. I love Doyle and Sherlock Holmes.
I was 9, then.
Brilliant, and the quality looks as good as it did back in 1968.
Sir Charles Baskerville, played by Ballard Barkely who was 'The Major' in Fawlty Towers
I think my favorite has to be when the moose head is on the check in counter top and Manuel is hidden "tidying up", then carries out a moose to befuddled man conversation with the Major.
I think it was The Germans episode.
Last scene sequence is really superb acting and direction. Mr Stock was fabulous in it. Just make you feel that you are watching a horror story. Perfect I must say.
Nice touch. The motto on the Baskerville coat of arms translates to "Beware the dog at night."
After several versions, this is probably my favorite.
My search turned up “beware the dog OF the night”. Fitting
I looked it up too! :)
Thank you for uploading this excellent version of a classic tale... I have never seen this one and I love Peter Cushing.
Perfect for a rainy chilly afternoon's entertainment. Bravo!
A rainy day in quarantine as well!
Cushing was the quintessential Holmes; the best of the many who played it.
I agree he's good, and I am only discovering him now. Not quite sure yet how I am going to rank him against Jeremy Brett (whom I hitherto considered _the_ Holmes), but Cushing does have an elegance and sharpness that lends itself very well to the character. All in all not a bad production at all.
I watched the show many times over the years. Grand Moff Tarken is a great detective!
@authorizeduser485
A fantastic version of the hound of the baskervilles excellent ie extremely unique
Another Great Film. Thank you Guilherme.
This is an excellent production a masterpiece
The young actor playing Sir Henry Baskerville played Prince Sancho in: "El Cid." I never forget a face.
He is Gary Raymond, who played Sergeant Jack Moffitt in "The Rat Patrol. "
Not forgetting he was acastus in jason and the Argonauts too.
He was also in: "Look Back in Anger," with Richard Burton and Claire Bloom.
This version is a true masterpiece
YES!
Being an older person, my favorite Holmes and Watson are Rathbone and Bruce. However, I enjoy any well-acted Holmes movie, and of course, this presentation starring Cushing and Stock is very entertaining and well done.🎉🎉🎉
Peter Cushing already made this same movie in 1959 !
He must be thinking " Here I go again " !
I still have a lot of affection for his 1959 Hammer Horror film version
I also prefer the 1959 version, Sir Christopher Lee rules as Sir Henry Baskerville! But the locations of this one are really amazing!
I prefer this version i think it's extremely unique
Totally stoked to watch this version. Ooooo!
Hello Karen, How are you doing?
No riding
I think Watson bangs that lady
Lightning a pipe with best tobacco, the scotch is shining in the crystal glass .. hello Sherlock
This was well worth watching!
So happy I found and subscribed to this series. Thank you for uploading it.
Those who have played Sherlock Holmes since 1893:
Charles Brookfield - 1893
William Gillette - 1899-1929 - 1300 Performances over 30 yrs.
Sherlock Holmes movie Baffled - 1900 Silent/Short - Max Goldberg
John F. Preston - 1900
Charles Rice - 1904
Karoly Baumann - 1905
Maurice Costello - 1905
Viggo Larsen - 1908
Alwin NeuB - 1908, 1911, 1914
Otto Lagoni - 1910
Holger Rasmussen - 1911
Mack Sennett - 1911-1912
James Bragington - 1914
Hugo Flink - 1917
Sam Robinson - 1918
Eille Norwood - 1921 Silent short movie - The Dying Detective
Burt Lytell - 1921
George Treville - 1912
Harry Benham - 1913
Francis Ford - 1914
H.A. Saintbury - 1916
Dennis Neillson-Terry - 1921
John Barrymore - 1922
Hamilton Deane - 1923-1932
Tod Slaughter - 1928, 1930
Richard Gordon - 1930
Clive Brook - 1929/1930/1932
Arthur Wontner - 1931- 1937 - Movie Series
Raymond Massey - 1931
Robert Rendel - 1931/1932
Reginald Owen - 1933
Felix Alymer - 1933
Louis Hector - 1934-1935, 1937
Bruno Guttner - 1937, 1939, 1942-1943
Orson Welles - 1938
Basil Rathbone - 1939-1946
Cedric Hardwick - 1945
Tom Conway - 1947
Howard Marion-Crawford - 1948
John Stanley - 1948-1949
Alan Napier - 1949
John Longden - 1951
Carleton Hobbs - 1952-1969
Ronald Howard - 1954 (39 episodes)
Sir John Gielgud - 1954-1955
Christopher Lee - 1962, 1970, 1992
Douglas Wilmer - 1964
Peter Cushing - 1959, 1968, 1984
John Neville - 1965, 1970, 1992
Robert Stephens - 1970
Stewart Granger - 1972
John Neville - 1973
John Cleese - 1973
Larry Hagman - 1974
Robert Powell - 1974
Leonard Nimoy - 1976
Kevin McCarthy - 1977
Roger Moore - 1976
Nicol Williamson - 1976
Christopher Plummer - 1977
Peter Cook - 1977
Paxton Whitehead - 1978
Geoffrey Whitehead - 1979-1980
Keith Mitchell - 1979
Charlton Heston - 1980
Frank Langella - 1980
Vasily Livanov - Russian TV - 1979-1981, 1983 & 1986
John Moffatt - 1981
Guy Henry - 1982
Tom Baker - 1982
Peter O’Toole - 1983
Ian Richardson - 1983
Jeremy Brett - 1984-1994
Nicholas Rowe - 1984
Tim Pigott-Smith - 1987
Dinsdale Landen - 1987
Anthony Higgins - 1987
Robert Rees - 1988
Ron Moody - 1988-1989
Clive Merrison - 1989-1998, 2002, 2004, 2008-2010
Edward Woodward - 1990
Richard E. Grant 1992
Robert Powell - 1993
1998-2019: John Gilbert - Episodes 1-18
Lawrence Albert - Episode 20
John Patrick Lowrie - Episodes 21-65 & 67-current
Dennis Bateman - Episode 66
Jason Gray-Stanford - 1999-2001 - Animation for Kids
Matt Frewer - 2000-2001
Joaquim de Almeida - 2001
Richard Roxburgh - 2002
James D’Arcy - 2002
Andrew Sachs - 2004
Rupert Everett - 2004
Jonathan Pryce - 2007
Javier Marzan - 2007
Roger Llewellyn - 2009
Ben Syder - 2010
Nicholas Briggs - 2010-2018
Johnny Lee Miller - 2012-2019
Benjamin Lawlor - 2013
Igor Petrenko - Russian TV Series - 2013
Robert Downey Jr. 2009 & 2011
Benedict Cumberbatch - 2010-2016
Nicholas Briggs - 2010-2018
Christian Rode - 2010, 2014
Seamus Dever - 2014
Ian McKellen - 2015
Euan Morton - 2015
Gregory Wooddell - 2015
Paul Andrew Goldsmith - 2015-2016
Ewen Bremner - 2016
Jay Taylor - 2017-2018
Yuko Takeuchi - 2018 (HBO Asia - female ‘Holmes’)
Orlando Wells - 2018
Samuel Tady - 2011, 2014, 2017-2018 (Tady Bros. Productions/on YTube)
Johnny Depp - 2018 (animation)
Will Ferrell - 2018
Nicholas Boulton - 2020
Henry Cavill - 2020
Ethan Bell - 2020 (Fan Film on TH-cam)
Ethan Thomas Jung - 2020 Fan Adv.
(Vagabond Repertory Theater Company-TH-cam)
This list is not exhaustive. however, these are some of the
many actors who have played Sherlock Holmes on stage,
screen, radio and TV adaptations.
Kelley I
Any chance you could update this telling us which medium each performed in? I’ve never seen/heard some of these and I’d be interested in tracking them down.
Elise Meleisea blimey shes done all that,im sure you can find for yourself
And Henry Cavill aka Superman
Thank you for the list. Some of those are rather surprising, and some of them (like Raymond Massey) I'm glad I never saw.
Brett and Hardwicke are for most of us, I think, the most convincing Holmes and Watson to date but Cushing is always compelling and does an excellent Holmes here aided by Stock as his faithful sidekick.
I agree!
Brett/Hardwicke is definitely my all time favourite version.
Not really. For most of us, it is Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce as the best Holmes and Watson.
@@KG-ro8ft The Rathbone/Bruce adaptations were too American for my taste. I'm afraid even tough both actors were 'british' ( neither were actually born in the UK ) they were spoilt by being made in Hollywood. I'm afraid Americans can't do British. Bruce's portrayal of Watson also made the character come across as a dithering/ bumbling fool. The Brett/ Hardwicke portrayals are by far the best, but I'd agree that Cushing/Stock make a very good combination.
David Burke and Edward Hardwick both made great Watsons, but Jeremy Brett portrayed Holmes like a theatre actor from the 19th Century. Interesting, but far to theatrical for my taste.
He looks exactly like Sherlock Holmes.
Thnx for uploading
He's a character IN A BOOK. Never has been a real person. So he can't "really" somehow look "just like him" 😂🙄🤷🏼♀️
It's sad to read that Cushing didn't like the series and the way it turned out. These episodes are actually quite faithful to the books (bar some edits to the stories like when and how they met, and in the Study in Scarlet the explanation of why Jefferson Hope killed his two victims)
After Jeremy Brett this is my favorit Holmes version.
This is Peter Cushing's second time that he played Sherlock Holmes, and the second adaption of "The Hound Of The Baskervilles" he started in.
I mean starred in. (Stupid Google auto correct. 😡)
You really mean "starred"
Don't blame Google for your inability to spell! By the way, you can edit your posts!
Ah, do not rely upon machines to proofread your prose, my dear Hyun Ahn!
I like Cushing as Holmes, and that Hammer production with Christopher Lee as Baskerville was very good.
Definitely my favourite version of the hound of the baskervilles this version is absolutely excellent unbelievablely unique
Cave Canem Noctis (Beware of the dog of the night) nice touch!
🤗 thanks it’s awesome
You are welcome! :)
Peter Cushing is Awesome thanks for sharing this, what was the hound doing at baskerville hall at the end of part Bless Dr Watson that scared him I thought Stapleton has It kept in the disused mine? why didn't it attack Barry more?
An excellent version
Gary Raymond was also appearing in the American T.V. Series, THE RAT PATROL at the time he appeared in this.
Enjoying the movie !!!
Thankyou for sharing
You are welcome! :)
Big Holmes fan, got every take on this tale, can't help but dream about a Robert Downey spin on it.
That any doctor living in London of that day should not immediately associate the initials "C.C.H." with Charing Cross Hospital beggars belief. Still a great novel and adaptation.
I have had the same thought myself, every version I watch. Doyle must have been chuckling to himself writing that bit.
I like the way Cushing's Holmes builds up Watson's ego in the opening scene then demolishes it brutally.
I really don't understand why Dr Watson is portrayed as elderly and / or foolish in most Sherlock Holmes adaptions. The novels and short stories suggest that he is a good-natured, caring man who very clearly loves women and manages to find himself a young wife in one of the early episodes. His softness and sensitivity certainly blind him to people's criminal energies, and he is often distracted by outer appearances, that doesn't make him stupid. One thing the latest BBC adaptions with Benedict Cumberbatch got right was that they made Dr Watson fairly attractive. It's annoying that many other films have shown Watson as Holmes's inferior on so many levels... including manners and looks.
I think Nigel Bruce started that tradition, but no Watson since has been as bad as his portrayal. Typical of Hollywood of the time, to completely misrepresent a famous British fictional character. Just as they did with a real character, Lt Bligh until Sir Anthony Hopkins redressed the story somewhat.
I don't understand what you misunderstand in Nigel Stocks performance. He delivers everything you mention, and is totally close to Doyle's original.
Typical Hollywood convention of the comic sidekick. As has been pointed out, Nigel Bruce bumbled, but bumbled charmingly and retaining Bruce's Watson for Rathbone's Holmes returned him to his proper status as partner after the trend of filming Holmes stories with Watson removed.
David Farley Oh I like some of Bruce's earliest portrayals of Watson, especially in the Twentieth Century Fox film 'The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' (1939) some of them could be kind of charming I'll admit,
Just for me however when Universal took over the Rathbone / Bruce Holmes films and put Holmes in the WW2 era Bruce's bumbling Watson really grew forced and rather grating in his pure idiocy IMHO and for me could never rank of there with Edward Hardwick among other Watsons as far as being faithful to the Canon goes.
I agree.
Absolutely beautiful production, they did wonderful with what must have been a limited budget. It doesn't look cheap. And it's so good to see accurate casting, not like today where they have to shoehorn in anomalous characters (for diversity that never existed) that take me right out of the fantasy of the production.
Diversity that you don't want to believe existed.
Interesting. I wasn’t aware that Cushing had done this one twice.
I like Peter Cushing great in this.
He was great!
Amaising & Intressting & classic
Imagine what if a man in flesh and blood with all the powers of Mr. Sherlock holmes existed on this planet, in reality.
Many have done......The one that spring's to mind is T.E Laurence.(of Arabia) His memoir the 7 pillars of wisdom was compussive reading for all u.s. officers going to do the tour in the middle east.
Never realized Gary Raymond was a big guy.
In El Cid (1961), Gary Raymond is even taller than Charlton Heston!
He's 6' 2", if that's what you mean by "big", but so thin that he doesn't look that tall until he stands next to someone else.
I am Hiring the Tarkin Detective Agency
This is the most detail to detail Hound of the Baskervilles of them all
i know everyone thinks Brett was the best, but for me it will always be Mr. Cushing.
Brett oozes 80`s, whilst Cushing fits the era perfectly.
Gary Raymond as the younger Baskerville. Raymond better known for his role in the TV series, The Rat Patrol.
The role of Sir Charles Baskerville is played by Ballard Berkeley, who is possibly better known today for his role as The Major in the TV series, Fawlty Towers
Ballard Berkley, 'Sir Charles Baskerville', was the Major in Fawlty Towers
I have to Disagree I thought PeterCushing Protrayed a Better Sherlock Holmes I liked how He Protrayed Him
Hello Emily, How are you doing?
I was in the same class as Peter's cousins pin and whoopee
Unbelievable version
Ballard Berkeley!! The Major from Fawlty Towers!!
That's right! Long live Basil the Rat!
I just started watching,yeah wow I never seen him anything else I don't think,and alas he won't be in this long
Its the first time I've heard Ballard Berkeley talking and not sounding drunk or very very confused! RIP to the gent.
I think the scene of Doctor Watson's group arriving at the country train station was filmed on the south Devon railway. the country train station looks familar
It's almost abstract. He's a cutie.
Which character?
@@hcu4359My comment ended up here. It was not meant for this
The first 47 seconds was quite enough for me.
Would love to watch this, can you check the video settings to see if you can make subtitles appear please? Thank you 🙏
"Evening Fawlty!"
OK! I seldom vascillate on this debate, and infrequently find my resolution undecided, mayhap lacking, but on this count I favor Cushing as Holmes.
how very verbose and correct.
Without a clue a very funny Holmes movie starring Michael Caine and Ben Kingsley 😁
Roderick Sloan yeah that's a good one
Peter Cushing and his fellow actor sir Christopher Lee the consummate professional English Actors Cushing should have been knighted aswel
A change of pace in the Holmes character is Young Sherlock Holmes starring Nicholas Rowe. Give it a look.
Cushing is always so faultless. This was obviously a low budget production so it's unfair to compare really, I prefer the Basil Rathbone version. A timeless classic
I do like the Rathbone version. It carries the Sherlock detective awareness to it's best.
I don't know a lot about Peter Cushing, but I do know that he lived in Whitstable.
One thing I’ve never liked about this version - why would Sir Hugo have a painting of his biggest fear hanging above the mantle to see every day??
The young sir Henry baskerwill is BEST!
Peter Cook and dudley moore
1978 version takes the prize
Of being a not too serious one!
And without a clue comes a close second
In real life many murders aren't solved!
Yes
Sir Hugo was an evil, wicked man!
The Major!!!!!
The dog is Old Schuck.
Indeed he is 😅
Holmes, the Thinking August
( crime- busting computer ) !
Dr Mortimer had a role in the 1988 version too
No one played a better sharlock Holmes than Basil Rathbone. Rathbone has out played every one.
He didn't
Peter Cushing was better than Rathbone..and Brett was the best Sherlock Holmes ever...my opinion.
I disagree @bornomala
Really??? Have you ever seen or heard about Mr Jeremy Brett??? He was, is and shall ever be the BEST SHERLOCK HOLMES....
Best Sherlock is Vasily Livanov in Russian version of the movie he s more english thet english once:))
Indeed
Quite rightly.
If the party are travelling to Devon then why are Holmes and Watson walking under the roof at St Pancras?
Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman are very underrated
Hugo Baskerville has a mullet
A bizarre production with some odd directing choices but it has a few good moments of note. The tale comes alive in the outdoor locations. Why the BBC couldn't make the interiors more than just a stage play is baffling; budgetary constraints I imagine
Personally I think Peter Cushing played Holmes far more akin to the stories than any other actor. I love Baz/Nige and Brett/Burke/Hardwicke but Cushing really got into the skin of the character, especially in the Hammer version of this, despite it being nothing like the novel. Who’s the actress playing Beryl here? She’s dreadful.
dreadful indeed.
I totally agree with you ie yu are totally correct i believe cushing is a fantastic Holmes ie brett was excellent but I think sometimes he over cooked it with over dramatic antics
Pretty good
Cushing and lee appeared in the 1959 version
It's the Major from Fawlty Towers!
Gary Raymond... he's still alive!
Still alive in corona times!
He is indeed -- still acting in live theatre.
“Do you have your service revolver Watson?”... because even Holmes knew how important the right to protect ones life is, even outside the home. One would think Chicago is the safest place on earth with their strict gun laws...
Amen.
On peut même pas mettre les sous titres ✌️👽🛸😰✌️👍✌️😰👍😁
Sir Charles, one day you will retire to a Torquey hotel and have to put up with a complete lunatic of a hotel owner!
The guy playing Stapleton looks exactly like Michael Fassbender.
Entitledprick Who's Michael Fassbender ? Is he a astronaut or something 😁
IN THIS..DR.WATSON IS SUPERBB...HOLMS ..& SIR HENRY IS BEST!
Peter Cushing's delivery is mistimed, Nigel Stock gives the best performance- the most generous !
Couldn't disagree more! If you read the books, Holmes is always thinking while speaking. The pauses are his thinking ahead and he doesn't reveal all of his thoughts during a conversation. Cushing did it perfectly!! ;-)
err...have the papers come, Fawlty?
This version was not filmed any where near Dartmoor....very bad..