Several nights ago I saw last years Sherlock Holmes and they pulled it off very well.
Fast paced, good acting, great clothes and some strange camera styles.
They managed to take a classic and keep it period yet update it and make it great fun.
So much better than the new Bond movies. I do not remember who the director is but my hat is off to him.
The four-in-hand ties were interesting in that they were not pulled up to the top of the collar - I wonder why as I do not personally like that empty space look. The thoughts of others?
Holmes had a classic striped silk which he seemed to wear in different styles as a tie and as an ascot of some sort.
One part of the movie I have not made up my mind about: As an example before a boxing match scene Holmes ran through his entire fighting style/sequence of punches in his minds eye - very realistic and fast paced so I was confused - then he actually did the exact same thing in real life. so we saw it twice.
Thoughts of others about this style of filming? Sort of a reverse on replaying something...
The movie was so good that I will watch it again which I rarely do. I aslo hope that they do a whole series of movies like 20!
I liked it. Holmes actually practices wing-shun (or maybe some other form of kung-fu, but it sure looks like wing-shun to me). That was unexpected, and since it's rarely seen, I really enjoyed it.
The lead actress is very attractive...
Yea, The movie was really great. I've also watch it.
Guy Ritchie is the director, one of his signatures is the back/forward stuff. He has made six movies so far and only one sucked (the one with Madonna, no surpirse).
I thought it was quite good, however, I still believe Jeremy Brett's portrayal of Holmes to be the best.
Sam, my dear sir, shouldn't you be manning the barricades?
Jeremy Brett was bipolar, allegedly. He was also a top coke head after the death of his wife, someone who worked for Granada told me of this, and the interviews during that period, before his heart attack do reinforce this position.
He was the best Holmes ever.
I have enjoyed reading the Sherlock Holmes stories since I was in 4th grade 45 years ago. I enjoyed the movie. I do think Jeremy Brett may have been the best Holmes. He had a supporting role as Freddy in the grand movie of My Fair Lady starring Rex Harrison and Audrey Hepburn. Billy Wilder directed a lovely version titled The Secret Life of Sherlock Holmes circa 1970. Nobody saw it. But I think it is still the best version of the stories. I do have a fond memory of driving through a snow storm in early January with my fiancee to see the movie. We got directions to the theater from the bartender at the legendary Hotel Viking in Newport.
Last edited by tmc22 (2010-05-21 19:48:31)
Legend has it that the only time O'Toole was consistently sober was on the set of Lawrence of Arabia. He had half of his pancreas removed in his mid-thirties, never stopped him from drinking.
Robert Downy JR holds belts in judo and another martial discipline. No doubt he knots them better than his ties, the loose affectation carried in his offscreen dress. I encountered him once years ago in his druggie days. He was, uh rude and yelled ' Do you know who I am?' I replied' Yes, Morton Downy junior.'
Drug and alcohol use seem the devil's price for talent. Jeremy Brett was in fact dying of cancer and mourning his late wife when he made the series. Every culture has it's accepatable drug and everything else is tabu. If nobody else is hurt and the user actually does produce creativity the proponents try to claim it seems a bit of hypocrisy by the sober to condemn while benefiting.
The interview with Wogan is good as well. Brett was a manic's manic.
The series was made over ten years and not all of those years he had cancer (which I didn't know) or his wife had just died. But each new series he brought something new to Holmes, the mannerisms, he made Holmes his own and enriched the screen version beyond all other actors.
I am not judging Brett or Downey, who I imagine now drug free would be more polite should we meet again. I agree that Bret is to date the definitive Holmes. It's not so much walking in another's shoes as acknowledging they take paths we do not with potholes and delights.