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Estudio en rojo

Título original: A Study in Scarlet
  • 1933
  • Passed
  • 1h 12min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
5,6/10
1,3 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Reginald Owen and Anna May Wong in Estudio en rojo (1933)
DramaMisterioTerrorThriller

Una sociedad secreta londinense recolecta los bienes de sus socios fallecidos y los reparte entre los demás. Cuando los miembros de la sociedad empiezan a caer como moscas, la viuda de uno d... Leer todoUna sociedad secreta londinense recolecta los bienes de sus socios fallecidos y los reparte entre los demás. Cuando los miembros de la sociedad empiezan a caer como moscas, la viuda de uno de ellos visita a Sherlock Holmes.Una sociedad secreta londinense recolecta los bienes de sus socios fallecidos y los reparte entre los demás. Cuando los miembros de la sociedad empiezan a caer como moscas, la viuda de uno de ellos visita a Sherlock Holmes.

  • Dirección
    • Edwin L. Marin
  • Guión
    • Arthur Conan Doyle
    • Robert Florey
    • Reginald Owen
  • Reparto principal
    • Reginald Owen
    • Anna May Wong
    • June Clyde
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    5,6/10
    1,3 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Edwin L. Marin
    • Guión
      • Arthur Conan Doyle
      • Robert Florey
      • Reginald Owen
    • Reparto principal
      • Reginald Owen
      • Anna May Wong
      • June Clyde
    • 35Reseñas de usuarios
    • 15Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Imágenes15

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    Reparto principal18

    Editar
    Reginald Owen
    Reginald Owen
    • Sherlock Holmes
    Anna May Wong
    Anna May Wong
    • Mrs. Pyke
    June Clyde
    June Clyde
    • Eileen Forrester
    Alan Dinehart
    Alan Dinehart
    • Merrydew
    • (as Allan Dinehart)
    John Warburton
    John Warburton
    • John Stanford
    Alan Mowbray
    Alan Mowbray
    • Lastrade
    Warburton Gamble
    Warburton Gamble
    • Dr. Watson
    J.M. Kerrigan
    J.M. Kerrigan
    • Jabez Wilson
    Doris Lloyd
    Doris Lloyd
    • Mrs. Murphy
    Billy Bevan
    Billy Bevan
    • Will Swallow
    Leila Bennett
    Leila Bennett
    • Daffy Dolly
    Wyndham Standing
    Wyndham Standing
    • Capt. Pyke
    Halliwell Hobbes
    Halliwell Hobbes
    • Dearing
    Hobart Cavanaugh
    Hobart Cavanaugh
    • Thompson - Innkeeper
    • (sin acreditar)
    Olaf Hytten
    Olaf Hytten
    • Merrydew's Butler
    • (sin acreditar)
    Tetsu Komai
    • Ah Yet
    • (sin acreditar)
    Tempe Pigott
    Tempe Pigott
    • Mrs. Hudson
    • (sin acreditar)
    Cecil Reynolds
    • William Baker
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • Edwin L. Marin
    • Guión
      • Arthur Conan Doyle
      • Robert Florey
      • Reginald Owen
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios35

    5,61.3K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    schweinhundt1967

    Not Based on the Original Story of the Same Name

    I first started reading the Holmes saga almost 40 years ago.Since then,my search has included all of the stories in the Canon,a great number of the pastiches,a vast number of the films,plays,and T.V. specials,and other works.So,while not considering myself a TRUE expert,nonetheless,I have a working knowledge of many of the adaptations.

    There has yet,to my knowledge,to be a dramatisation of the original story of this name.And,it seems,for good reason.The plot involves the murder of 2 American tourists to London,both of whom being members of the Church of Latter Day Saints.The framework story then opens,and shows a fictionalized,and highly derogatory account of a Mormon totalitarian police state.Dissidents are terrrorized,nonconformists are murdered,and travelers are slaughtered so that new additions can be obtained for the harems of the Elders.

    Understandably,given these details,one can understand as to why NO adaptation has yet,and probably never will be completed.Not only would it never play in Salt Lake City,but it would also alienate a major religious body.
    5hte-trasme

    Don't study it too hard

    "A Study in Scarlet" was produced by the low-budget E. W. Hammons at the low-budget Tiffany Studios starring a former Watson (possibly cast because of his association with Holmes films), Reginald Owen, as Sherlock Holmes. The presence of Holmes and Watson is the only connection to the Arthur Conan Doyle story of the same name, and that, in and of itself, is not a bad thing. I have no problem with a Sherlock Holmes film straying from slavish fidelity to the creator of the character. However, this one seems to deviate from the original not as a result of the filmmakers' creativity being exercised in order to make something new, but often in ways that make Holmes into someone that resembles a generic detective protagonist more than the most recognizable of them all.

    It's a little odd to see a supposed Sherlock Holmes dart around wearing clothes clearly dated to the 1930s (the only appearance of the famous deerstalker is in cartoon form in the opening titles), but since the story doesn't depend on anything terribly time-period appropriate, the transposition to the contemporary setting doesn't have too much of an effect. A curiosity here is that we are repeated told that Sherlock Holmes lives at 221A Baker Street, not the traditional 221B, even though he still seems to be living upstairs. Whether that's a simple error on somebody's part or a nod to the liberties being taken with the original stories there is no way to tell.

    Owen, unfortunately, is rather stiff and unremarkable in is portrayal of Sherlock Holmes. Many point out that he doesn't look the part (and, traditionally, he doesn't) but that hasn't been a problem for countless other actors. If he had managed to make the role his own through his performance it wouldn't have been for him either. He has little presence and seems to think that if he bellows each line with enough conviction and self-satisfaction he'll sound as if he knows what he's talking about.

    Sadly the rest of the actors are rather wooden and unimpressive as well, including Anna May Wong. Warburton Gamble makes no impression as Watson, and some of the murder victims are laughably unconvincing in their hesitant screams for help at their dying moments. Everything is taken deadly seriously except for some overplayed comic relief involving characters at a pub, which only semi works.

    There is a good mystery story at the heart of this film about a circle of criminals whose members are being murdered one-by-one, but the execution (including the direction which, the exception of one clever shot inside Merrydew's office near the end, mainly doesn't go beyond static two- an three-shots) is too lackluster to serve it well. The scriptwriter deserves credit for a good concept and for a good method of developing the story through showing us going on in all quarters without completely explaining its significance, but nobody else seems to have been trying very hard.

    It's still entertaining most of the time, and fun for viewers who will eat up anything Holmesian, but it's far from the best executed film version of the detective's adventures.
    6theowinthrop

    "...of abominable memory."

    Sherlock Holmes became such a quick fixture in motion pictures that it is possible to write studies on the various movies and actors centered on that character.

    This particular film was an early Hollywood take on Holmes in the sound period. It is interesting to note that it came out only three years after Sir Arthur Conan Doyle died in 1930. By the time this had come out Hollywood had done silent and sound films about Holmes with William Gillette, John Barrymore, and (more recently) Clive Brooks. But the three best Holmes' of the sound period were still to come along: Arthur Wontner in Great Britain, Basil Rathbone in Hollywood, and Jeremy Brett (on television). Holmes in this version was Reginald Owen, best remembered for his "Ebenezer Scrooge" in the 1938 version of "A Christmas Carol". Owen was a very good character actor (villainous in films like "The Call Of The Wild", but funny as anything in "The Good Fairy"). He had played Watson already, so he was one of the few actors to essay both friends parts. But he seemed too laid back to be a good Holmes.

    "A Study In Scarlet" appeared in December 1887 in "Beeton's Christmas Annual", a long forgotten magazine in Great Britain, which is only now recalled because of Conan Doyle's novella. If you are lucky enough to stumble onto the Beeton's of that month and year (and it is the original) than hold onto it - it's worth many thousands of dollars.

    It's in two parts. The first half is "The Lauriston Gardens Mystery", wherein Dr. John H. Watson (our narrator) introduces us to his friend and roommate Sherlock Holmes, and then to the adventure (set in April 1881) where he first became aware that Holmes was a consulting detective, and was consulted by Scotland Yard's Detectives Tobias Gregson and "G." (no further name ever given) Lestrade (not "Lastrade" as the movie's cast of characters named him). Lestrade would be the best known of the detectives in the saga who would consult Holmes (and would be most memorably played by Dennis Hoey in the Rathbone films). Here he's played by Alan Mowbray - not badly but with little electricity.

    The plot of the first portion of the novella is about the murder of two men, one by poison and one by a knife wound in the heart. Holmes traces the story back to the old west, where in the second half (entitled "The Country of the Saints") it is linked to the Mormons in Utah.

    Most (if not all) was jettisoned, into a story about murder for insurance, centering around Anna May Wong and Alan Dinehart. Dinehart's character Thaddeus Merrydew, is based on a single line of writing in the four novels and fifty six short stories that were written by Conan Doyle. In "The Adventure of the Empty House", when reading a list of people with "M" in their name (he is searching for the biography of Colonel Sebastian Moran), he finds a reference to "Merrydew of abominable memory." That's it! No "Thaddeus Merrydew", just "Merrydew". Somebody concocting the script remembered that one reference. I may add, this was also the last time in movies there was any villain named Merrydew against Mr. Sherlock Holmes.

    As an early talkie film about Holmes, it is worth seeing - but it is not among the best Holmes movies.
    Darwinskid

    A Study in Scarlet in name only, but still a fine serial

    I must echo what others have said and say that this is A Study in Scarlet in name only, it bears no relation to the original story by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, which was the first time the character Sherlock Holmes was introduced and had met Watson. Here though, Holmes and Watson are established as older and have had many years of partnership. Even so, the film A Study in Scarlet follows common tropes in Sherlock Holmes stories and has its charm, its only real drawback is that it was made nearly a century ago and sound and image quality are not up to the level most are familiar with these days so the suspense is rather dry in most places. A lot of people have mixed feelings towards Reginald Owen's portrayal of Sherlock Holmes, personally I rather like it, it feels like a more older and experienced Sherlock than what you're normally used to. Certainly worth watching if you're a fan of the character.
    6Hitchcoc

    Nicely Atmospheric

    I had never seen Reginald Owen in anything but a somewhat weak Christmas Carol. He plays a larger, more imposing Sherlock Holmes. Holmes' appearance is usually rather striking, so actors play on his idiosyncrasies. In this movie, he sort of blends in. The story has nothing to do with the story. It will probably never be produced as written because of it's religious issues. This is an attempt to apprehend the big cheese in a series of murders involving the "Scarlet Circle." Men are dying according to the same poem used in Christie's Ten Little Indians (And Then There Were None). Holmes is aware of what is going on, but can't really strike quickly. This results in deaths not being prevented. While there is a seriousness to this film, there is a lot of humor as well. The characters are rich and interesting and the acting is pretty good. See it for another angle on the Holmes canon.

    Más del estilo

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    5,7
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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Bears no relation in plot to Arthur Conan Doyle's original novel of the same name, as the producers purchased rights only to the title, not the storyline of Doyle's book.
    • Pifias
      Holmes' and Watson's address is shown as 221-A Baker Street rather than the well-known and correct 221-B. But since their apartment is on the upper floor of the building, the -B is implied, A being the ground floor dwelling and B the upper floor dwelling in the building. However, in the advertisement Holmes places in the newspaper, he gives his address as 221-A Baker Street .
    • Citas

      Mrs. Murphy: Then you've had to take me, Mr. Holmes?

      Sherlock Holmes: I'll, ahh, take up your case.

      Mrs. Murphy: Mind you, it'll have to be for love.

      Sherlock Holmes: Love?

      Mrs. Murphy: For nix. I've noticed how you like workin' for nothin'.

      Sherlock Holmes: My interest is to bring the criminal to justice.

      Mrs. Murphy: Well, never mind about justice, never mind about the crime. All I want is my husband's lawful money. And I want you to slap that thievin' lawyers face right across, between his greasy fat chops. Good night, Mr. Holmes. I'll be seeing you and thank you kindly.

    • Créditos adicionales
      The credits list the character of Inspector Lestrade as "Lastrade".
    • Conexiones
      Edited into Who Dunit Theater: A Study in Scarlet (2015)

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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 14 de mayo de 1933 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • A Study in Scarlet
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • California Tiffany Studios - 4516 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos(Studio)
    • Empresa productora
      • K.B.S. Productions Inc.
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      • 1h 12min(72 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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