The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes
- Fernsehserie
- 1991–1993
- 50 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
8,7/10
6470
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuHolmes and Dr. Watson solve the mysteries of the Disappearance of Lady Frances Carfax, Thor Bridge, Shoscombe Old Place, The Boscombe Valley Mystery, The Illustrious Client and The Creeping ... Alles lesenHolmes and Dr. Watson solve the mysteries of the Disappearance of Lady Frances Carfax, Thor Bridge, Shoscombe Old Place, The Boscombe Valley Mystery, The Illustrious Client and The Creeping Man.Holmes and Dr. Watson solve the mysteries of the Disappearance of Lady Frances Carfax, Thor Bridge, Shoscombe Old Place, The Boscombe Valley Mystery, The Illustrious Client and The Creeping Man.
Folgen durchsuchen
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Jeremy Brett is ( possibly next to William Gillette, Basil Rathbone or Arthur Wontner ) the greatest Holmes portrayer of all time. He, with Edward Hardwicke (son of Sir Cedric) make the stories come alive with actors just like the characters. If you love Holmes, try to catch this on TV (I'll admit it's not always on).
The fascinating Granada series with the incredible Jeremy Brett as the master sleuth Sherlock Holmes continued well into the 1990's with episodes pertaining to the later life of the great detective. The stories, in read form, are quite fascinating and when brought to the screen, they were, as always carried over with care and panache.
Thank goodness for the wonderful folks at Granada Television. In the mid 1980s, they created the absolute best Sherlock Holmes ever to make it to the big or small screen. Unlike all the previous versions, which LIBERALLY deviated from the Conan Doyle stories, the Granada films tried to be perfect in every detail.
Unlike the caricature of Holmes that you see in previous films where he wears a deerstalker hat, smokes a curved pipe and spouts "elementary, my dear Watson", this Holmes is true to the original character. Additionally, Dr. Watson is not the bumbling idiot as portrayed by Nigel Bruce (Bruce should burn in Hell for how he ruined this character).
The first mini-series by Granada was exceptional and Jeremy Brett was the greatest Holmes ever. The second picked up exactly where it should have as did this third series.
Intelligently written and wonderful throughout. See these films and get hooked!!
Unlike the caricature of Holmes that you see in previous films where he wears a deerstalker hat, smokes a curved pipe and spouts "elementary, my dear Watson", this Holmes is true to the original character. Additionally, Dr. Watson is not the bumbling idiot as portrayed by Nigel Bruce (Bruce should burn in Hell for how he ruined this character).
The first mini-series by Granada was exceptional and Jeremy Brett was the greatest Holmes ever. The second picked up exactly where it should have as did this third series.
Intelligently written and wonderful throughout. See these films and get hooked!!
Bendict Who? The consummate TV Sherlock Holmes (Jeremy Brett) returns with his loyal friend Doctor John H. Watson (Edward Hardwicke) in another series of fighting the foes of civilization.
Unfortunately, the ravages of time and illness have taken their toll on Brett. He looks bad (accentuated by the incessant close-ups). Somewhere in the middle of "The Return of Sherlock Holmes" Brett began sounding like he had a permanent head-cold. That's gotten a lot worse.
The big take-away from this series is "The Boscombe Valley Mystery." It's almost like the glory days of the first two series. "The Disappearance of Lady Carfax" with guest stars Cheryl Campbell and Michael Jayston is acceptable, despite the changes to the story, the exreme downer ending, and the fact that Holmes spends the first part of the story playing with toys. "Shoscombe Old Place" sticks closely to the story but the Charles Augustus Milverton-based "The Master Blackmailer" is only good for a welcome appearance of Colin Jeavon's Lestrade, which is as iconic as Brett's Holmes. "The Last Vampire" marks a nadir not only for this series but the entire Brett/Holmes era. The other episodes, while not so dreadful as "Vampire," are unremarkable.
Jeremy Brett's reign as Sherlock Holmes was welcome from the start and Holmes/Watson fans rejoiced. But Brett's unfortunately failing physical and mental facilities (a sad story worthy of a TV movie of the week) unfortunately wrecked our hopes. By the final series, Charles Gray's Mycroft was picking up too much slack.
Too, the stories were given too much licence and produced weird anomalies.
"The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" with Brett still stands as the best Sherlock Holmes series I've ever seen and "The Return of Sherlock Holmes," despite the changed Watson, while only occasionally touching those initial Olympian heights, is quite good. By "The Casebook of Sherlock Holmes" the whole shebang was unraveling. What a shame.
The best few episodes still stand up as first-rate Holmes. The rest . . . Oh, the humanity!
Unfortunately, the ravages of time and illness have taken their toll on Brett. He looks bad (accentuated by the incessant close-ups). Somewhere in the middle of "The Return of Sherlock Holmes" Brett began sounding like he had a permanent head-cold. That's gotten a lot worse.
The big take-away from this series is "The Boscombe Valley Mystery." It's almost like the glory days of the first two series. "The Disappearance of Lady Carfax" with guest stars Cheryl Campbell and Michael Jayston is acceptable, despite the changes to the story, the exreme downer ending, and the fact that Holmes spends the first part of the story playing with toys. "Shoscombe Old Place" sticks closely to the story but the Charles Augustus Milverton-based "The Master Blackmailer" is only good for a welcome appearance of Colin Jeavon's Lestrade, which is as iconic as Brett's Holmes. "The Last Vampire" marks a nadir not only for this series but the entire Brett/Holmes era. The other episodes, while not so dreadful as "Vampire," are unremarkable.
Jeremy Brett's reign as Sherlock Holmes was welcome from the start and Holmes/Watson fans rejoiced. But Brett's unfortunately failing physical and mental facilities (a sad story worthy of a TV movie of the week) unfortunately wrecked our hopes. By the final series, Charles Gray's Mycroft was picking up too much slack.
Too, the stories were given too much licence and produced weird anomalies.
"The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" with Brett still stands as the best Sherlock Holmes series I've ever seen and "The Return of Sherlock Holmes," despite the changed Watson, while only occasionally touching those initial Olympian heights, is quite good. By "The Casebook of Sherlock Holmes" the whole shebang was unraveling. What a shame.
The best few episodes still stand up as first-rate Holmes. The rest . . . Oh, the humanity!
Following on from The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and The Return of Sherlock Holmes, Sherlock Holmes continues to solve crimes in his own inimitable fashion. He is ably assisted by his friend Dr Watson.
The third Sherlock Holmes series to star Jeremy Brett as Sherlock Holmes. The first series, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, was brilliant. Quite easily the definitive adaption of the novels as it replicated the Victorian England setting and atmosphere so perfectly. The plots were solid and character engagement was good. The engagement levels were aided by the fantastic performances of Jeremy Brett.
The second series, The Return of Sherlock Holmes, was also great but not quite as good as the first series. Most of the ingredients were still there but it didn't quite have the darkness, grittiness, tension and engagement levels of The Adventures Of so brilliant. It just felt less polished.
The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes started very well and seemed a worthy follow-up to those two excellent series. However, from a point the episodes get weaker and weaker, as if all the best stories had been taken and the producers were happy to adapt any Sherlock Holmes story into an episode. Some very odd plots, culminating in the final episode which was pure style over substance.
Jeremy Brett also isn't quite in the same form as he was in the first two series, further diminishing the quality.
All in all it's okay but nowhere as good as the first two series.
The third Sherlock Holmes series to star Jeremy Brett as Sherlock Holmes. The first series, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, was brilliant. Quite easily the definitive adaption of the novels as it replicated the Victorian England setting and atmosphere so perfectly. The plots were solid and character engagement was good. The engagement levels were aided by the fantastic performances of Jeremy Brett.
The second series, The Return of Sherlock Holmes, was also great but not quite as good as the first series. Most of the ingredients were still there but it didn't quite have the darkness, grittiness, tension and engagement levels of The Adventures Of so brilliant. It just felt less polished.
The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes started very well and seemed a worthy follow-up to those two excellent series. However, from a point the episodes get weaker and weaker, as if all the best stories had been taken and the producers were happy to adapt any Sherlock Holmes story into an episode. Some very odd plots, culminating in the final episode which was pure style over substance.
Jeremy Brett also isn't quite in the same form as he was in the first two series, further diminishing the quality.
All in all it's okay but nowhere as good as the first two series.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe last performance of Dame Gwen Ffrangcon Davies. NOTE: She was 100. She gave up the stage in her 80s when her eyesight made moving around the sets unsafe. In several of her few film roles she appears seated.
- VerbindungenEdited into Biography: Sherlock Holmes: The Great Detective (1995)
Top-Auswahl
Melde dich zum Bewerten an und greife auf die Watchlist für personalisierte Empfehlungen zu.
- How many seasons does The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes have?Powered by Alexa
Details
Zu dieser Seite beitragen
Bearbeitung vorschlagen oder fehlenden Inhalt hinzufügen
Oberste Lücke
What is the French language plot outline for The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes (1991)?
Antwort