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Sherlock Holmes: Secret Weapon [VHS] by Roy William Neill
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Product detailsActor: Basil Rathbone, Kaaren Verne, Lionel Atwill, Nigel Bruce, William Post Jr. Director: Roy William Neill Cinematographer: Lester White Editor: Otto Ludwig Producer: Howard Benedict Writer: Arthur Conan Doyle Writer: Edmund L. Hartmann Writer: Edward T. Lowe Jr. Writer: Scott Darling Edition: VHS Tape Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); French (Original Language) Format: Black & White, NTSC, Original recording remastered Running Time: 68 minutes Release Date: 2003-10-28 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Publisher: Mpi Home Video Studio: Mpi Home Video
VHS Movie Reviews of Sherlock Holmes: Secret Weapon [VHS]Movie Review: Sherlock Holmes And The Secret Weapon Summary: 4 StarsThis installment of the Sherlock Holmes series involves Holmes' old nemesis, Professor Moriarty, who is trying help Germany locate secret superbomb sight being used by England.
The film has the usual twists and turns of a Holmes film. As usual, Doctor Watson and Inspector Lestrade accompany Holmes on his quest to conquer the evil Moriarty. Holmes also uses a variety of diguises to uncover clues and to get to where he needs to be.
Again, Holmes and company are victorious.
A good and entertaining film.
Recommended.
Movie Review: Holmes Matches Wartime Wits With Moriarty Summary: 3 Stars"Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon" (1943) is one of the better World War II entries - pitting Basil Rathbone's immortal detective against Lionel Atwill's sinister Professor Moriarty. In his first Holmes effort, director Roy William Neill makes the most of a "blood-draining" climax. Nigel Bruce's Dr. Watson is far less bumbling than usual, with the comic relief provided by Dennis Hoey's debut as Inspector Lestrade. Fast-moving escapism that gets the job done in 68 minutes. Avoid the inferior public-domain DVDs and purchase this MPI release, which offers an excellent 35mm restoration by the UCLA Film and Television Archive.
Movie Review: Intrigue and Espionage Summary: 2 StarsThe film begins in Switzerland. Two men enter a caf?, and old man meets them to give them orders. They plan to steal a bombsight from Dr. Franz Tobel. [Did you notice the clue?] Will the spies be fooled by an impersonation? Can they be flown out of the country at night? They arrive safely in London. Mission accomplished? There seems to be some trickery here. [Or a lack of security?] What is Dr. Tobel drawing? Who is after him? Holmes explains his deductions. The bombsight is tested on Salisbury Plain [it looks like the western desert of the USA]. Will it revolutionize aerial bombardment? There are scenes of London. Dr. Tobel wants to work independently without unwanted attention. The bombsight is composed of four parts, each one produced at independent workshops. [Are all telephone calls monitored by a government agency?]
When Dr. Tobel goes missing Sherlock Holmes looks for him while disguised. Holmes finds a person who knows something. Will he walk into a trap? Will Moriarity eliminate Holmes at last? Or will his plot fail? There is a trick to raise the writing from an impression on the paper beneath. Can they decipher the code? What if the men named are dead? "What is the name of the fourth man?" Holmes figured out the trick. Will Moriarity? Who has the better plan? "A keen observation." "You've played into my hands." Will Lestrade and Watson arrive in time? Will Moriarity fall into his own trap for an ironic ending? [What about the sequel?]
Movie Review: Lots Of Flaws, But Entertaining Summary: 4 StarsSherlock Holmes (Basil Rathbone) begins this story in disguise, helping to smuggle famous physicist "Dr. Franz Tobel" (William Post) out of Switzeralnad and under the watchful eye of the Nazis, who want his bomb sight plans. The Allies obviously want it, too, and Sherlock is there to help. Dr. Tobel has invented an instrument which greatly aids in the accuracy of aerial bombardment.
Holmes and Dr. Tobel arrive safely back at Baker Street but the scientist would rather be alone, for some mysterious reason, although he had promised the English to help them, not the Germans. He stays true to that promise but there are some desperate moments for Holmes and the English along the way.
It's an entertaining film and one in which our famous detective uses not one but three different disguises. He needs all the help he can get when he goes up against his arch-rival, "Professor Moriarity." One complaint: if Moriarity was that evil, he would have dispensed with Holmes without batting an eyelash, instead of giving him openings to escape. It's pretty sad, too, when the usual dim-witted Dr. Watson (Nigel Bruce) has to rescue his boss from certain death a couple of times!
Yes, there are some credibility issues in this story but if you can put your brain on hold a few times, it's a fun film to watch....and it looks beautiful, thanks to the great restoration job done on this DVD. It makes the old print come alive with some wonderful visuals, particularly the night-time shots.
One other note: whoever did the English subtitles in here misspelled or misinterpreted at least a half dozen words. It's very sloppy work, and not the first time I've encountered this watching the entire series on the restored DVD set.
Movie Review: Holmes & the Dancing Men Summary: 3 StarsThe second in Universal's Holmes series of mysteries with a dash of wartime propaganda is an okay entry. It's more of an adventure than a mystery, notable for Rathbone adopting two varied and effective disguises as well as one of the oddest scenes in any movie. Once captured by Moriarty, Holmes elaborately describes a particularly devious manner to kill someone that Moriarty immediately implements against Holmes. Okayyyyyyy.
Summary of Sherlock Holmes: Secret Weapon [VHS]BASIL RATHBONE NIGEL BRUCE In SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE SECRET WEAPON Digitally Restored in 35mm The master detective Sherlock Holmes (Basil Rathbone) and his faithful cohort Dr. Watson (Nigel Bruce) are back, preserved and digitally restored in 35mm to original condition by the UCLA Film and Television Archive. This newly restored version of the classic film includes the period war bond tag, studio logo and credits from its original theatrical release. Filled with ominous shadows and interesting camera angles, the visual beauty of the film in 35mm is stunning. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's "The Adventure of the Dancing Men" inspired THE SECRET WEAPON. The wartime plot pits Sherlock Holmes once more against his nemesis, the villainously brilliant Professor Moriarty, who was believed dead but is now working for the Nazis. The Nazis have assigned Moriarty to kidnap Dr. Franz Tobel, the inventor of a new super bombsight. Sherlock Holmes outwits the enemy agents and escapes with Tobel and his precious invention. But despite elaborate precautions, the inventor later disappears before the process of manufacturing the bombsight is perfected. Holmes and Watson must stop the Nazis from getting their hands on the new bombsight, wrapped in a code of dancing men. Using a variety of disguises - a Swiss inventor, the Lascar sailor Ram Singh, and an old German bookseller, Holmes puts his own life on the line in a race against the clock to prevent Moriarty from carrying out his evil plans. THE SECRET WEAPON is also the first of the films to introduce Dennis Hoey as Scotland Yard detective Inspector Lestrade. Preserved and restored in 35mm by the UCLA Film and Television Archive.
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