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Sherlock Holmes (1939 film series)

A series of fourteen films based on Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories was released between 1939 and 1946; the British actors Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce played Holmes and Dr. John Watson, respectively. The first two films in the series were produced by 20th Century Fox and released in 1939. The studio stopped making the films after these, but Universal Pictures acquired the rights from the Doyle estate and produced a further twelve films.

Although the films from 20th Century Fox had large budget, high production values and were set in the Victorian era, Universal Pictures updated the films to have Holmes fighting the Nazis, and produced them as B pictures with lower budgets. Both Rathbone and Bruce continued their roles when the series changed studios, as did Mary Gordon, who played the recurring character Mrs Hudson.

In the 1970s four of the Universal-produced films fell into the public domain when their copyright was not renewed. These four films were restored and colourised. Some of the films in the series had become degraded over time, with some of the original negatives lost and others suffering from nitrate deterioration because of the unstable cellulose nitrate film. The UCLA Film and Television Archive restored the series, putting the films onto modern polyester film, in a process that was jointly paid for by UCLA, Warner Bros. and Hugh Hefner.

Background

 
Basil Rathbone as Holmes

In 1938, Basil Rathbone was cast as Sherlock Holmes for the 20th Century-Fox adaptation of The Hound of the Baskervilles; Nigel Bruce was chosen to play Dr. John Watson.[1] Darryl F. Zanuck, Gregory Ratoff and Gene Markey made the choice of Rathbone as Holmes during a conversation at a party in Hollywood.[2] Filming began on 29 December 1938 under the direction of Sidney Lanfield and the film was released on 31 March 1939.[1][3] Later that year a second film, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, followed, which was based on Sherlock Holmes, an 1899 stage play written by William Gillette.[4] Although Fox planned to make further Holmes films with Rathbone and Bruce, complications in negotiations between the company and the estate of the character's creator, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, brought a premature end to the studio's involvement;[5] their decision to withdraw from further productions was also because the Second World War meant that "foreign agents and spies were much more typical and topical than the antiquated criminal activities of Moriarty and the like".[6] On 2 October 1939, a month after the release of Adventures, Rathbone and Bruce resumed their roles on radio, in The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, with episodes written by Dennis Green and Anthony Boucher.[7] Rathbone left the radio series in May 1946, while Bruce remained until 1947, with Tom Conway replacing Rathbone.[8]

In February 1942, following negotiations with the Doyle estate, Universal Pictures acquired the rights to the films and signed contracts with Rathbone and Bruce to continue their portrayals.[6] Universal's deal—worth $300,000—was for seven years, and they purchased the rights to 21 stories in the canon in a contract that stipulated that the company had to make three films a year, of which two had to be adaptations of Doyle's stories.[9] Universal was allowed to substantially revise the adaptations and modernise them,[10] often to the point where little of the original story remained recognisable.[11] Universal decided to update the stories to a Second World War setting, and the first film, Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror—based on Doyle's 1917 story "His Last Bow"—was updated to a Second World War setting, with Holmes attempting to capture a Nazi agent.[12] Bruce and Rathbone initially objected to updating the setting of the stories.[11] The change of era for Holmes is explained in the opening titles, with a caption that informs viewers that Holmes is "ageless, invincible and unchanging", going on to say that he was "solving significant problems of the present day".[13]

While the Fox adaptations had high production values[14] and larger budgets,[15] the Universal films changed the approach of the series, and aimed "simply to be entertaining 'B' pictures".[16] The second film produced by Universal, Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon, was directed by Roy William Neill; he went on to direct the remaining ten films—and produce the final nine—in the Universal series.[17]

Rathbone became frustrated with the role of Holmes and left the series in 1946; he stated that his "first picture was, as it were, a negative from which I merely continued to produce endless positives of the same photograph".[15] Universal considered replacing him on screen with Tom Conway—as they subsequently did with the radio series—but instead decided to end the series, despite still having the rights for the next three years. In December 1946, shortly after the end of the series, Neill died of a heart attack.[18]

Cast

The writer David Stuart Davies concluded that Basil Rathbone was "the actor who has come closest to creating the definitive Sherlock Holmes on screen", also describing the choice as "inspired".[19] The historian Alan Barnes agrees, and wrote that "Rathbone was Sherlock Holmes".[20] The choice of Nigel Bruce as Watson was more contentious, with Davies pointing out that "Bruce's characterisation bore little relation" to the written Watson, even though the portrayal eventually produced "an endearingly avuncular figure".[19] The historian David Parkinson agrees, and wrote that Bruce's "avuncular presence provided the perfect counterbalance to Rathbone's briskly omniscient sleuth".[21] Barnes notes that, despite the criticisms against him, Bruce rehabilitated Watson, who had been a marginal figure in the cinematic Holmes canon to that point: "after Bruce, it would be a near-unthinkable heresy to show Holmes without him".[22] With the combination of Rathbone and Bruce, the historian Jim Harmon considered that this was "near perfect casting".[23]

The series included continuity of two actors playing recurring characters: Mary Gordon, who played Mrs. Hudson, and Dennis Hoey, who portrayed Inspector Lestrade.[24] Other recurring characters were played by numerous actors, with Professor Moriarty being played by three people:[25] Lionel Atwill in Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon, Henry Daniell in The Woman in Green and George Zucco in The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes.[25][a] Some supporting actors reappeared in a number of roles in what Davies called the series' "own little repertory company of actors";[19] these included Harry Cording, who played seven roles in different films,[b] and Gerald Hamer and Harold De Becker, who both played four roles,[c] among others.[4]

Complete film list

Film sequence
Title Release Director Based on
(by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle unless stated)
Plot Ref.
The Hound of the Baskervilles 31 March 1939 Sidney Lanfield The Hound of the Baskervilles (1901–02) Holmes and Watson are consulted about the arrival in England of Sir Henry Baskerville, the last of the Baskervilles, heir to the family estate on Dartmoor, following the death of Sir Henry's uncle. A local myth surrounds the Baskervilles that a vicious hound stalks the descendants of the family. Holmes sends Watson to Baskerville Hall while he assumes the disguise of a peddler. Holmes reveals his identity to Watson and the two witness the death of an escaped convict, killed by a large hound. Holmes and Watson declare the case closed and claim that they are leaving Baskerville Hall; they return to the moor that night and kill the dog as it attacks Sir Henry. Holmes then unmasks the killer as John Stapleton, who was a Baskerville and hoped to claim the fortune and title for himself. [3]
[38]
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes 1 September 1939 Alfred L. Werker Sherlock Holmes (1899)
by William Gillette and Conan Doyle
After Professor Moriarty is acquitted of murder, Holmes and Watson are visited by Ann Brandon, who tells the detectives that her brother Lloyd has received a strange note—a drawing of a man with an albatross hanging around his neck—identical to one received by her father just before his murder ten years previously: her brother is killed later that day. Holmes believes an attempt will be made on Ann's life and he disguises himself as a music hall entertainer for a garden party, where he captures her assailant. The assassin is Gabriel Mateo, out for revenge on the Brandons for the murder of his father by Ann's father in a dispute over ownership of their South American mine; Mateo reveals that it was Moriarty who urged him to seek revenge. Holmes realises Moriarty was using Ann's attempted murder as a distraction from his real crime: an attempt to steal the Crown Jewels. Holmes goes to the Tower of London where Moriarty is masquerading as a policeman. The pair struggle, and Moriarty falls, presumably to his death. [39]
[40]
Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror 18 September 1942 John Rawlins "His Last Bow" (1917) During the Second World War, Holmes is consulted by the British Inner Council to capture a Nazi agent who broadcasts under the name the "Voice of Terror", and who appears to be running a sabotage ring in England. After Gavin, one of his underworld contacts, is killed on his doorstep, Holmes convinces Kitty—Gavin's wife—to find out the meaning of a clue Gavin had uncovered. She does so, and manages to inveigle her way into the house of Meade, the main Nazi agent in the ring. After being given a tip off from Kitty, Holmes takes the Inner Council to an abandoned church on the coast of southern England, where they thwart a German invasion. Holmes then uncovers the mole in the council, Sir Evan Barham, head of the council and the German spy Heinrich von Bork, who had been posing as Barham for the previous twenty years. [26]
[41]
Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon 12 February 1943 Roy William Neill "The Adventure of the Dancing Men" (1903) A disguised Holmes helps Swiss scientist Dr Tobel to escape from Gestapo kidnappers and flee to England with his revolutionary bombsight. Without telling Holmes or Watson, Tobel splits his bombsight into four parts and leaves a part each with four Swiss scientists also living in London. Shortly afterwards, he is kidnapped by Professor Moriarty, who is working with the Nazis; a coded note giving details of the scientists that was left for Holmes was also taken by Moriarty. Holmes discovers tracings of the note and decodes it, but three of the scientists had already been killed. Holmes takes the place of the fourth scientist and allows himself to be kidnapped by Moriarty's men. Moriarty tries to kill Holmes by exsanguination, but Watson and Inspector Lestrade rescue the detective. As Moriarty tries to escape he falls through a trapdoor, seemingly to his death. [28]
[42]
Sherlock Holmes in Washington 30 April 1943 Roy William Neill Original storyline A British courier is carrying top secret papers that he had put onto microfilm and inserted into a matchbook; realising he is being pursued by Nazi agents, he drops the matches into a handbag of the socialite Nancy Partridge, a fellow passenger. He is subsequently kidnapped and killed and Holmes is instructed to find his killers and the missing document. On his arrival in Washington, Holmes soon realises that Partridge has the document. The Nazi agents, led by William Easter, have also come to the same conclusion and kidnapped her. Holmes tracks her down to an antique shop and meets the owner, whom he recognises as a German agent from the First World War. Holmes, Watson and the police subsequently round up Easter and the gang, and obtain the microfilmed documents. [27]
[43]
Sherlock Holmes Faces Death 17 September 1943 Roy William Neill "The Adventure of the Musgrave Ritual" (1893) Watson is the doctor in charge of an army hospital at Musgrave Manor in Northumberland; when his assistant, Dr. Bob Sexton, is attacked, Watson asks Holmes for help. On their arrival they find the body of Geoffrey Musgrave, head of the family. The following day Geoffrey's young sister Sally performs the "Musgrave Ritual", which passes the house and estate to her elder brother Phillip. Holmes questions the butler, Alfred Brunton, who is subsequently dismissed for drunkenness. The next day Phillip Musgrave is murdered and Inspector Lestrade suspects the butler for the crime, although the butler is now missing. Holmes realises that the key to the mystery may be in the text of the Musgrave Ritual, which contains oblique references to chess moves. Holmes decodes the ritual, using the staff and patients of the house as chess pieces to play a game on the chequered floor of the main hall. He deduces that the ritual refers to a cellar below the hall: on examining the area he finds the body of the missing butler. Holmes poses as the Butler's corpse, and tricks Sexton into unveiling himself as the murderer. Holmes explains that Sexton had found a land grant and was murdering the family in order to gain the benefits. [34]
[44]
The Spider Woman 21 January 1944 Roy William Neill "The Adventure of the Dying Detective" (1913), The Sign of the Four (1890) and "The Final Problem" (1893) A series of similar suicides take place in London while Holmes is on holiday in Scotland; shortly after complaining to Watson about his health, Holmes collapses into a ravine and is missing, presumed dead. In reality Holmes has faked his own death to try and track down the gang behind what he believes are murders, conducted by a "female Moriarty". Seeing that the common connection between the deaths is a life insurance scheme, Holmes disguises himself as Rajni Singh, an Indian officer who has lost heavily on the gambling tables and is in disgrace: he is approached by Adrea Spedding, the leader of the gang, who tells him that he can borrow money using his insurance policy. She sees through Holmes's disguise and attempts to kill him using a poisonous spider whose venom causes such excruciating pain that the victims kill themselves. Holmes and Watson visit the leading arachnologist Matthew Ordway to see who has purchased the spiders recently, but Holmes deduces that the man is an imposter. The imposter escapes and Holmes and Watson find Ordway's body in the house. They trace the villains to a fairground where, despite an attempt on Holmes's life, the gang are arrested. [29]
[45]
[46]
The Scarlet Claw 26 May 1944 Roy William Neill Original storyline Following the death of Lady Lillian Penrose in a small Canadian village, Holmes investigates, despite the locals blaming the murder on a glowing, murderous phantom. Holmes establishes that Lady Penrose was Lillian Gentry, a former actress who had left acting after one of her fellow actors committed a murder. Further investigation and deduction from Holmes shows that an ex-judge also lives in the town: he had overseen the case of the murderer. The local hotel owner was a former prison guard who also knew the killer. After the judge and hotel owner's daughter are also killed, Holmes sets a trap for the murderer, who had been living in the village for the previous two years disguised as a postman. The murderer also tries to kill Holmes, but fails, before running off into the fog, where the hotel owner finds and kills him in revenge. [35]
[47]
The Pearl of Death 22 September 1944 Roy William Neill The Adventure of the Six Napoleons (1904) On board a ship to England, a courier for the Royal Regent Museum is robbed of the Borgia Pearl by Naomi Drake. She hides the pearl in a camera and persuades a clergyman to carry the camera through customs. The clergyman is Holmes in disguise and he removes the pearl and takes it to the museum. When the pearl is displayed Holmes tests the security system and manages to disable it: while he does so, the pearl is stolen by Giles Conover, Drake's criminal partner. Conover is chased by museum staff, but manages to hide the pearl before he is captured. He is released shortly afterwards for lack of evidence. A number of related murders then follow, where the victims have their backs broken and their china and crockery smashed. Holmes establishes that the murders were committed by the Hoxton Creeper; Holmes and Watson examine the smashed crockery and discover that each victim owned a bust of Napoleon. Holmes visits the makers of the busts, near the museum, and realises that Conover hid the pearl in one of the busts before he was arrested. After getting a list of the owners of the busts, Holmes takes the place of the final owner and confronts Conover. Holmes tricks the Hoxton Creeper into killing Conover, before shooting the Creeper in self-defence. [30]
[48]
The House of Fear 16 March 1945 Roy William Neill "The Five Orange Pips" (1891) When members of the Good Comrades club start being killed, Holmes is called to their Scottish mansion to investigate. Before a victim is killed, he receives an envelope with orange pips. After each death, the life insurance of the victim is shared between the survivors. In all cases the identification is difficult, with the victims only identified by items of clothing or, in one case, a tattoo. Inspector Lestrade receives a note from a local shopkeeper, who says he has a clue. When Lestrade, Holmes and Watson visit, they find the shopkeeper killed. Holmes exhumes one of the graves and find the coffin empty. They return to the mansion and find a sixth member has been murdered and the sole surviving member, Bruce Alastair, arrested. Watson goes missing shortly afterwards and Holmes and Lestrade locate a hidden tunnel which leads to an old smugglers' cave: inside they find the six missing members of the club who had all faked their deaths in order to cash in on the life insurance, using the corpses of recently dead villagers. [31]
[49]
The Woman in Green 15 June 1945 Roy William Neill "The Adventure of the Empty House" (1894) Holmes and Watson are consulted by Inspector Gregson of Scotland Yard to assist with the "finger murders", where young women have been murdered and one of their fingers have been removed. Holmes and Gregson see Sir George Fenwick at Pembroke House with an attractive woman, Lydia Marlowe. The couple leave and Fenwick is drugged and later wakes to find another murder has been committed and that the finger is in his pocket. He returns to Marlowe's flat where he meets Professor Moriarty, who blackmails him. The following day Fenwicke is found killed, clutching a matchbook from Pembroke House. After an attempt on Holmes's life by a hypnotised former soldier, Holmes and Watson visit the Mesmer Club, whose members are all interested in hypnotism. Marlowe also visits the club and lures Holmes back to her flat where she hypnotises him. Moriarty instructs the hypnotised Holmes to write a suicide note and leads him to the terrace in order that the detective should commit suicide. Watson and the police raid the flat and Holmes reveals that he was not hypnotised after all. As he is being arrested, Moriarty tries to jump to the building next door, but instead falls, apparently to his death. [37]
[50]
[51]
Pursuit to Algiers 26 October 1945 Roy William Neill Original storyline Following the assassination of King Stephan of Rovinia, Holmes and Watson are engaged by that country's Prime Minister to assist with the passage of Prince Nikolas of Rovinia from his school in Britain to Algiers, where Rovianian agents can take him the rest of the way. The first stage of the journey is supposed to be for Holmes, Watson and the Prince to travel by aeroplane, but when they arrive at the airfield, their plane has been swapped for a smaller version and Watson is unable to travel with them. Holmes instructs him to act as a decoy by travelling by liner. On board Watson hears the news that Holmes's plane has crashed and he believes Holmes dead; shortly afterwards he treats one of the passengers who reveals himself to be Holmes, travelling with the prince. A number of the passengers are suspicious, including a singer, Sheila Woodbury, who Holmes deduces is carrying the recently stolen Duchess of Brookdale's emeralds. When the liner docks in Lisbon, it is joined by three men, who try to kill Holmes and abduct the Prince, but Holmes foils all their attempts. When the ship docks at Alexandria the men surprise Holmes, tying him up and abducting the prince. When Holmes is discovered by Watson and the Prime Minister of Rovinia, he informs them that the prince had been acting as their steward for the journey, and that the men had abducted an imposter he had put in place: he had also arranged for the local police to arrest the trio when they disembarked. [36]
[52]
Terror by Night 1 February 1946 Roy William Neill Original storyline Holmes and Watson are hired by Ronald Carstairs and his mother Lady Margaret to protect the Star of Rhodesia diamond on a train trip from London to Scotland. Also on the train is Inspector Lestrade of Scotland Yard, providing official protection for the jewel. Watson arrives late for the train, bringing with him a member of his club, Major Duncan-Bleek. While Holmes, Watson and Duncan-Bleek are dining, Carstairs is murdered and the diamond stolen. Holmes examines a coffin in the baggage carriage; the coffin carries the body of the mother of Vivian Vedder, one of the passengers. Holmes discovers a secret compartment in the coffin, large enough to hold a man. When questioned, Vedder admits that she was paid to transport the coffin. Holmes admits that he had previously swapped the real diamond for a copy: he gives the real diamond to Lestrade for safe keeping. Holmes and Watson return to the baggage carriage and find the conductor murdered by a poison dart. Duncan-Bleek is joined by Sands, the murderer who had previously hidden in the coffin; Duncan-Bleek tells him that Lestrade has the jewel and instructs him to obtain it. Sands knocks Lestrade unconscious and steals the diamond, but he is murdered by Duncan-Bleek in the process. The train picks up a group of policemen. Holmes informs them that Duncan-Bleek is really Moran. Moran is arrested and the diamond discovered. Just as he is about to be taken off the train, Moran steals a policeman's gun; the lights in the carriage go off and there is a scuffle. When the lights come on, Moran is being led from the train with a jacket over his head. Holmes tells Watson that the police were Moran's accomplices. He goes on to say that Moran is handcuffed under the table, and that the false policemen had taken Lestrade, who later arrests the men. [32]
[53]
Dressed to Kill 7 June 1946 Roy William Neill Original storyline Watson is visited by Julian "Stinky" Emery, an old friend, who tells him and Holmes of a strange robbery in his house—the theft of a cheap music box from his collection. Holmes listens to a similar cheap box which Emery had purchased. That night Emery is murdered and the music box is stolen. Holmes establishes that the music box was one of three identical boxes sold in an auction, all of which had been made in Dartmoor Prison. Holmes visits the second purchaser, only to find the box has just been stolen. He visits the third seller shortly before the murderers also visit: he takes the box with him and deduces that the tunes all differ slightly, and they contain a coded message to the location of stolen property. While an attempt is made on Holmes's life, the final box is stolen from Watson. While Holmes escapes from his trap, he and Watson finally crack the code and go to Samuel Johnson's house, where they capture the criminals and obtain the printing plates for the £5 note. [33]
[54]

Colour versions and restoration

 
Split-screen showing restored (left) and pre-restored (right) image from The House of Fear.[55]

Four of the films—Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon, The Woman in Green, Terror by Night and Dressed to Kill—are in the public domain.[56] In 2006 the four films were digitally restored and computer colourised by Legend Films, who released the colour and black and white films on DVDs.[57][58]

The two 20th Century Fox films—The Hound of the Baskervilles and The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes—had survived complete and in good condition, but those in the Universal series suffered badly over the years, as they passed through the hands of different copyright owners.[59] In 1993 the UCLA Film and Television Archive started a restoration project on the series after the unstable cellulose nitrate film was found to be suffering from deterioration.[60][61] Restoration on the first six films—The Woman in Green, The Pearl of Death, Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon, The Scarlet Claw, Terror by Night and The Spider Woman—took four years from 1993; the costs for the restoration were met by UCLA and Hugh Hefner, who was a fan of the Rathbone-Holmes series. From 1998 Warner Bros. matched Hefner's funding and the remaining six films—Dressed to Kill, Pursuit to Algiers, Sherlock Holmes Faces Death, The House of Fear, Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror and Sherlock Holmes in Washington—were then restored, a process that was completed in 2001.[60]

The restoration involved transferring the films onto modern polyester film and restoring the images frame-by-frame. The process was complicated by the poor quality of some of the films. Robert Gitt, the UCLA Preservation Officer, commented that "the copies of the films that survive are many generations removed from the original and flaws have been photographed and re-photographed into these copies". The Scarlet Claw and Pursuit to Algiers were both in very poor condition and Dressed to Kill was missing some 35mm reels. This being the case, the restorers had to blow up some 16mm prints to replace the scenes.[59]

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ All three actors also played other roles in the series.
    Atwill also played:
    * Dr. James Mortimer in The Hound of the Baskervilles[3]
    Daniell also played:
    * Sir Anthony Lloyd in Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror[26]
    * William Easter in Sherlock Holmes in Washington[27]
    Zucco also played:
    * Richard Stanley (aka Heinrich Hinkle) in Sherlock Holmes in Washington[27]
  2. ^ Cording played:
    * Camberwell in Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror[26]
    * Jack Brady in Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon[28]
    * Fred Garvin in The Spider Woman[29]
    * George Gelder in The Pearl of Death[30]
    * Captain Jack Simpson in The House of Fear[31]
    * Mock in Terror by Night[32]
    * Hamid in Dressed to Kill[33]
  3. ^ Hamer played:
    * Major Langford in Sherlock Holmes Faces Death[34]
    * Potts/Tanner/Ramson in The Scarlet Claw[35]
    * Kingston in Pursuit to Algiers[36]
    * Mr. Shallcross in Terror by Night[32]
    De Becker played:
    * Peg Leg in Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon[28]
    * Pub proprietor in Sherlock Holmes Faces Death[34]
    * Boss in The Pearl of Death[30]
    * Shabby man in The Woman in Green[37]

References

  1. ^ a b Barnes 2011, p. 253.
  2. ^ Davies 1976, p. 60.
  3. ^ a b c "The Hound of the Baskervilles". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  4. ^ a b Davies 1976, p. 64.
  5. ^ Barnes 2011, p. 21.
  6. ^ a b Davies 1976, p. 69.
  7. ^ Marks 2008, p. 79.
  8. ^ Marks 2008, pp. 84–85.
  9. ^ Barnes 2011, pp. 214–15.
  10. ^ Boström 2018, p. 241.
  11. ^ a b Boström 2018, p. 242.
  12. ^ Langman & Finn 1995b, pp. 250–51.
  13. ^ Voice of Terror 2003.
  14. ^ Langman & Finn 1995a, p. 115.
  15. ^ a b Macnab, Geoffrey (12 July 2002). "Friday review: Crime and Punishment: Sherlock Holmes might have been created for the cinema. But playing him cost at least two actors their careers". The Guardian. London. p. 12.
  16. ^ Davies 1976, p. 71.
  17. ^ Barnes 2011, p. 210.
  18. ^ Barnes 2011, p. 58.
  19. ^ a b c Davies 1976, p. 102.
  20. ^ Barnes 2011, p. 254.
  21. ^ Parkinson 2004.
  22. ^ Barnes 2011, p. 256.
  23. ^ Harmon 2003, p. 179.
  24. ^ Harmon 2003, p. 181.
  25. ^ a b Hardy 1997, p. 170.
  26. ^ a b c "Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  27. ^ a b c "Sherlock Holmes in Washington". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  28. ^ a b c "Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  29. ^ a b "The Spider Woman". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  30. ^ a b c "The Pearl of Death". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  31. ^ a b "The House of Fear". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  32. ^ a b c "Terror by Night". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  33. ^ a b "Dressed to Kill". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  34. ^ a b c "Sherlock Holmes Faces Death". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  35. ^ a b "The Scarlet Claw". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  36. ^ a b "Pursuit to Algiers". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  37. ^ a b "The Woman in Green". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  38. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  39. ^ "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  40. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  41. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  42. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  43. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  44. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  45. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  46. ^ Langman & Finn 1995b, p. 250.
  47. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  48. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  49. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  50. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  51. ^ Langman & Finn 1995b, p. 314.
  52. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  53. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  54. ^ . Film & TV Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  55. ^ Secret Weapon 2003.
  56. ^ "American Film Technologies to Colorimage Public-Domain Films". PR Newswire. 22 January 1988.
  57. ^ Green, Frank (28 July 2006). "California company provides a newer look for older films". Copley News Service.
  58. ^ "Colorization & Restoration". Legend Films. Retrieved 16 August 2013.
  59. ^ a b Gitt 2003.
  60. ^ a b Murphy, Neil (6 January 2010). "Under the Magnifying Glass". Filmink. Archived from the original on 30 December 2012. Retrieved 16 August 2013.
  61. ^ Maher, Adrian (12 June 1994). "Reeling in the Past;". Los Angeles Times. p. 15.

Sources

External links

sherlock, holmes, 1939, film, series, series, fourteen, films, based, arthur, conan, doyle, sherlock, holmes, stories, released, between, 1939, 1946, british, actors, basil, rathbone, nigel, bruce, played, holmes, john, watson, respectively, first, films, seri. A series of fourteen films based on Sir Arthur Conan Doyle s Sherlock Holmes stories was released between 1939 and 1946 the British actors Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce played Holmes and Dr John Watson respectively The first two films in the series were produced by 20th Century Fox and released in 1939 The studio stopped making the films after these but Universal Pictures acquired the rights from the Doyle estate and produced a further twelve films Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce in Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon Although the films from 20th Century Fox had large budget high production values and were set in the Victorian era Universal Pictures updated the films to have Holmes fighting the Nazis and produced them as B pictures with lower budgets Both Rathbone and Bruce continued their roles when the series changed studios as did Mary Gordon who played the recurring character Mrs Hudson In the 1970s four of the Universal produced films fell into the public domain when their copyright was not renewed These four films were restored and colourised Some of the films in the series had become degraded over time with some of the original negatives lost and others suffering from nitrate deterioration because of the unstable cellulose nitrate film The UCLA Film and Television Archive restored the series putting the films onto modern polyester film in a process that was jointly paid for by UCLA Warner Bros and Hugh Hefner Contents 1 Background 2 Cast 3 Complete film list 4 Colour versions and restoration 5 Notes and references 5 1 Notes 5 2 References 5 3 Sources 6 External linksBackground Edit Basil Rathbone as Holmes In 1938 Basil Rathbone was cast as Sherlock Holmes for the 20th Century Fox adaptation of The Hound of the Baskervilles Nigel Bruce was chosen to play Dr John Watson 1 Darryl F Zanuck Gregory Ratoff and Gene Markey made the choice of Rathbone as Holmes during a conversation at a party in Hollywood 2 Filming began on 29 December 1938 under the direction of Sidney Lanfield and the film was released on 31 March 1939 1 3 Later that year a second film The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes followed which was based on Sherlock Holmes an 1899 stage play written by William Gillette 4 Although Fox planned to make further Holmes films with Rathbone and Bruce complications in negotiations between the company and the estate of the character s creator Sir Arthur Conan Doyle brought a premature end to the studio s involvement 5 their decision to withdraw from further productions was also because the Second World War meant that foreign agents and spies were much more typical and topical than the antiquated criminal activities of Moriarty and the like 6 On 2 October 1939 a month after the release of Adventures Rathbone and Bruce resumed their roles on radio in The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes with episodes written by Dennis Green and Anthony Boucher 7 Rathbone left the radio series in May 1946 while Bruce remained until 1947 with Tom Conway replacing Rathbone 8 In February 1942 following negotiations with the Doyle estate Universal Pictures acquired the rights to the films and signed contracts with Rathbone and Bruce to continue their portrayals 6 Universal s deal worth 300 000 was for seven years and they purchased the rights to 21 stories in the canon in a contract that stipulated that the company had to make three films a year of which two had to be adaptations of Doyle s stories 9 Universal was allowed to substantially revise the adaptations and modernise them 10 often to the point where little of the original story remained recognisable 11 Universal decided to update the stories to a Second World War setting and the first film Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror based on Doyle s 1917 story His Last Bow was updated to a Second World War setting with Holmes attempting to capture a Nazi agent 12 Bruce and Rathbone initially objected to updating the setting of the stories 11 The change of era for Holmes is explained in the opening titles with a caption that informs viewers that Holmes is ageless invincible and unchanging going on to say that he was solving significant problems of the present day 13 While the Fox adaptations had high production values 14 and larger budgets 15 the Universal films changed the approach of the series and aimed simply to be entertaining B pictures 16 The second film produced by Universal Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon was directed by Roy William Neill he went on to direct the remaining ten films and produce the final nine in the Universal series 17 Rathbone became frustrated with the role of Holmes and left the series in 1946 he stated that his first picture was as it were a negative from which I merely continued to produce endless positives of the same photograph 15 Universal considered replacing him on screen with Tom Conway as they subsequently did with the radio series but instead decided to end the series despite still having the rights for the next three years In December 1946 shortly after the end of the series Neill died of a heart attack 18 Cast Edit Dennis Hoey as Inspector Lestrade in Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon The writer David Stuart Davies concluded that Basil Rathbone was the actor who has come closest to creating the definitive Sherlock Holmes on screen also describing the choice as inspired 19 The historian Alan Barnes agrees and wrote that Rathbone was Sherlock Holmes 20 The choice of Nigel Bruce as Watson was more contentious with Davies pointing out that Bruce s characterisation bore little relation to the written Watson even though the portrayal eventually produced an endearingly avuncular figure 19 The historian David Parkinson agrees and wrote that Bruce s avuncular presence provided the perfect counterbalance to Rathbone s briskly omniscient sleuth 21 Barnes notes that despite the criticisms against him Bruce rehabilitated Watson who had been a marginal figure in the cinematic Holmes canon to that point after Bruce it would be a near unthinkable heresy to show Holmes without him 22 With the combination of Rathbone and Bruce the historian Jim Harmon considered that this was near perfect casting 23 The series included continuity of two actors playing recurring characters Mary Gordon who played Mrs Hudson and Dennis Hoey who portrayed Inspector Lestrade 24 Other recurring characters were played by numerous actors with Professor Moriarty being played by three people 25 Lionel Atwill in Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon Henry Daniell in The Woman in Green and George Zucco in The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes 25 a Some supporting actors reappeared in a number of roles in what Davies called the series own little repertory company of actors 19 these included Harry Cording who played seven roles in different films b and Gerald Hamer and Harold De Becker who both played four roles c among others 4 Complete film list EditFilm sequence Title Release Director Based on by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle unless stated Plot Ref The Hound of the Baskervilles 31 March 1939 Sidney Lanfield The Hound of the Baskervilles 1901 02 Holmes and Watson are consulted about the arrival in England of Sir Henry Baskerville the last of the Baskervilles heir to the family estate on Dartmoor following the death of Sir Henry s uncle A local myth surrounds the Baskervilles that a vicious hound stalks the descendants of the family Holmes sends Watson to Baskerville Hall while he assumes the disguise of a peddler Holmes reveals his identity to Watson and the two witness the death of an escaped convict killed by a large hound Holmes and Watson declare the case closed and claim that they are leaving Baskerville Hall they return to the moor that night and kill the dog as it attacks Sir Henry Holmes then unmasks the killer as John Stapleton who was a Baskerville and hoped to claim the fortune and title for himself 3 38 The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes 1 September 1939 Alfred L Werker Sherlock Holmes 1899 by William Gillette and Conan Doyle After Professor Moriarty is acquitted of murder Holmes and Watson are visited by Ann Brandon who tells the detectives that her brother Lloyd has received a strange note a drawing of a man with an albatross hanging around his neck identical to one received by her father just before his murder ten years previously her brother is killed later that day Holmes believes an attempt will be made on Ann s life and he disguises himself as a music hall entertainer for a garden party where he captures her assailant The assassin is Gabriel Mateo out for revenge on the Brandons for the murder of his father by Ann s father in a dispute over ownership of their South American mine Mateo reveals that it was Moriarty who urged him to seek revenge Holmes realises Moriarty was using Ann s attempted murder as a distraction from his real crime an attempt to steal the Crown Jewels Holmes goes to the Tower of London where Moriarty is masquerading as a policeman The pair struggle and Moriarty falls presumably to his death 39 40 Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror 18 September 1942 John Rawlins His Last Bow 1917 During the Second World War Holmes is consulted by the British Inner Council to capture a Nazi agent who broadcasts under the name the Voice of Terror and who appears to be running a sabotage ring in England After Gavin one of his underworld contacts is killed on his doorstep Holmes convinces Kitty Gavin s wife to find out the meaning of a clue Gavin had uncovered She does so and manages to inveigle her way into the house of Meade the main Nazi agent in the ring After being given a tip off from Kitty Holmes takes the Inner Council to an abandoned church on the coast of southern England where they thwart a German invasion Holmes then uncovers the mole in the council Sir Evan Barham head of the council and the German spy Heinrich von Bork who had been posing as Barham for the previous twenty years 26 41 Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon 12 February 1943 Roy William Neill The Adventure of the Dancing Men 1903 A disguised Holmes helps Swiss scientist Dr Tobel to escape from Gestapo kidnappers and flee to England with his revolutionary bombsight Without telling Holmes or Watson Tobel splits his bombsight into four parts and leaves a part each with four Swiss scientists also living in London Shortly afterwards he is kidnapped by Professor Moriarty who is working with the Nazis a coded note giving details of the scientists that was left for Holmes was also taken by Moriarty Holmes discovers tracings of the note and decodes it but three of the scientists had already been killed Holmes takes the place of the fourth scientist and allows himself to be kidnapped by Moriarty s men Moriarty tries to kill Holmes by exsanguination but Watson and Inspector Lestrade rescue the detective As Moriarty tries to escape he falls through a trapdoor seemingly to his death 28 42 Sherlock Holmes in Washington 30 April 1943 Roy William Neill Original storyline A British courier is carrying top secret papers that he had put onto microfilm and inserted into a matchbook realising he is being pursued by Nazi agents he drops the matches into a handbag of the socialite Nancy Partridge a fellow passenger He is subsequently kidnapped and killed and Holmes is instructed to find his killers and the missing document On his arrival in Washington Holmes soon realises that Partridge has the document The Nazi agents led by William Easter have also come to the same conclusion and kidnapped her Holmes tracks her down to an antique shop and meets the owner whom he recognises as a German agent from the First World War Holmes Watson and the police subsequently round up Easter and the gang and obtain the microfilmed documents 27 43 Sherlock Holmes Faces Death 17 September 1943 Roy William Neill The Adventure of the Musgrave Ritual 1893 Watson is the doctor in charge of an army hospital at Musgrave Manor in Northumberland when his assistant Dr Bob Sexton is attacked Watson asks Holmes for help On their arrival they find the body of Geoffrey Musgrave head of the family The following day Geoffrey s young sister Sally performs the Musgrave Ritual which passes the house and estate to her elder brother Phillip Holmes questions the butler Alfred Brunton who is subsequently dismissed for drunkenness The next day Phillip Musgrave is murdered and Inspector Lestrade suspects the butler for the crime although the butler is now missing Holmes realises that the key to the mystery may be in the text of the Musgrave Ritual which contains oblique references to chess moves Holmes decodes the ritual using the staff and patients of the house as chess pieces to play a game on the chequered floor of the main hall He deduces that the ritual refers to a cellar below the hall on examining the area he finds the body of the missing butler Holmes poses as the Butler s corpse and tricks Sexton into unveiling himself as the murderer Holmes explains that Sexton had found a land grant and was murdering the family in order to gain the benefits 34 44 The Spider Woman 21 January 1944 Roy William Neill The Adventure of the Dying Detective 1913 The Sign of the Four 1890 and The Final Problem 1893 A series of similar suicides take place in London while Holmes is on holiday in Scotland shortly after complaining to Watson about his health Holmes collapses into a ravine and is missing presumed dead In reality Holmes has faked his own death to try and track down the gang behind what he believes are murders conducted by a female Moriarty Seeing that the common connection between the deaths is a life insurance scheme Holmes disguises himself as Rajni Singh an Indian officer who has lost heavily on the gambling tables and is in disgrace he is approached by Adrea Spedding the leader of the gang who tells him that he can borrow money using his insurance policy She sees through Holmes s disguise and attempts to kill him using a poisonous spider whose venom causes such excruciating pain that the victims kill themselves Holmes and Watson visit the leading arachnologist Matthew Ordway to see who has purchased the spiders recently but Holmes deduces that the man is an imposter The imposter escapes and Holmes and Watson find Ordway s body in the house They trace the villains to a fairground where despite an attempt on Holmes s life the gang are arrested 29 45 46 The Scarlet Claw 26 May 1944 Roy William Neill Original storyline Following the death of Lady Lillian Penrose in a small Canadian village Holmes investigates despite the locals blaming the murder on a glowing murderous phantom Holmes establishes that Lady Penrose was Lillian Gentry a former actress who had left acting after one of her fellow actors committed a murder Further investigation and deduction from Holmes shows that an ex judge also lives in the town he had overseen the case of the murderer The local hotel owner was a former prison guard who also knew the killer After the judge and hotel owner s daughter are also killed Holmes sets a trap for the murderer who had been living in the village for the previous two years disguised as a postman The murderer also tries to kill Holmes but fails before running off into the fog where the hotel owner finds and kills him in revenge 35 47 The Pearl of Death 22 September 1944 Roy William Neill The Adventure of the Six Napoleons 1904 On board a ship to England a courier for the Royal Regent Museum is robbed of the Borgia Pearl by Naomi Drake She hides the pearl in a camera and persuades a clergyman to carry the camera through customs The clergyman is Holmes in disguise and he removes the pearl and takes it to the museum When the pearl is displayed Holmes tests the security system and manages to disable it while he does so the pearl is stolen by Giles Conover Drake s criminal partner Conover is chased by museum staff but manages to hide the pearl before he is captured He is released shortly afterwards for lack of evidence A number of related murders then follow where the victims have their backs broken and their china and crockery smashed Holmes establishes that the murders were committed by the Hoxton Creeper Holmes and Watson examine the smashed crockery and discover that each victim owned a bust of Napoleon Holmes visits the makers of the busts near the museum and realises that Conover hid the pearl in one of the busts before he was arrested After getting a list of the owners of the busts Holmes takes the place of the final owner and confronts Conover Holmes tricks the Hoxton Creeper into killing Conover before shooting the Creeper in self defence 30 48 The House of Fear 16 March 1945 Roy William Neill The Five Orange Pips 1891 When members of the Good Comrades club start being killed Holmes is called to their Scottish mansion to investigate Before a victim is killed he receives an envelope with orange pips After each death the life insurance of the victim is shared between the survivors In all cases the identification is difficult with the victims only identified by items of clothing or in one case a tattoo Inspector Lestrade receives a note from a local shopkeeper who says he has a clue When Lestrade Holmes and Watson visit they find the shopkeeper killed Holmes exhumes one of the graves and find the coffin empty They return to the mansion and find a sixth member has been murdered and the sole surviving member Bruce Alastair arrested Watson goes missing shortly afterwards and Holmes and Lestrade locate a hidden tunnel which leads to an old smugglers cave inside they find the six missing members of the club who had all faked their deaths in order to cash in on the life insurance using the corpses of recently dead villagers 31 49 The Woman in Green 15 June 1945 Roy William Neill The Adventure of the Empty House 1894 Holmes and Watson are consulted by Inspector Gregson of Scotland Yard to assist with the finger murders where young women have been murdered and one of their fingers have been removed Holmes and Gregson see Sir George Fenwick at Pembroke House with an attractive woman Lydia Marlowe The couple leave and Fenwick is drugged and later wakes to find another murder has been committed and that the finger is in his pocket He returns to Marlowe s flat where he meets Professor Moriarty who blackmails him The following day Fenwicke is found killed clutching a matchbook from Pembroke House After an attempt on Holmes s life by a hypnotised former soldier Holmes and Watson visit the Mesmer Club whose members are all interested in hypnotism Marlowe also visits the club and lures Holmes back to her flat where she hypnotises him Moriarty instructs the hypnotised Holmes to write a suicide note and leads him to the terrace in order that the detective should commit suicide Watson and the police raid the flat and Holmes reveals that he was not hypnotised after all As he is being arrested Moriarty tries to jump to the building next door but instead falls apparently to his death 37 50 51 Pursuit to Algiers 26 October 1945 Roy William Neill Original storyline Following the assassination of King Stephan of Rovinia Holmes and Watson are engaged by that country s Prime Minister to assist with the passage of Prince Nikolas of Rovinia from his school in Britain to Algiers where Rovianian agents can take him the rest of the way The first stage of the journey is supposed to be for Holmes Watson and the Prince to travel by aeroplane but when they arrive at the airfield their plane has been swapped for a smaller version and Watson is unable to travel with them Holmes instructs him to act as a decoy by travelling by liner On board Watson hears the news that Holmes s plane has crashed and he believes Holmes dead shortly afterwards he treats one of the passengers who reveals himself to be Holmes travelling with the prince A number of the passengers are suspicious including a singer Sheila Woodbury who Holmes deduces is carrying the recently stolen Duchess of Brookdale s emeralds When the liner docks in Lisbon it is joined by three men who try to kill Holmes and abduct the Prince but Holmes foils all their attempts When the ship docks at Alexandria the men surprise Holmes tying him up and abducting the prince When Holmes is discovered by Watson and the Prime Minister of Rovinia he informs them that the prince had been acting as their steward for the journey and that the men had abducted an imposter he had put in place he had also arranged for the local police to arrest the trio when they disembarked 36 52 Terror by Night 1 February 1946 Roy William Neill Original storyline Holmes and Watson are hired by Ronald Carstairs and his mother Lady Margaret to protect the Star of Rhodesia diamond on a train trip from London to Scotland Also on the train is Inspector Lestrade of Scotland Yard providing official protection for the jewel Watson arrives late for the train bringing with him a member of his club Major Duncan Bleek While Holmes Watson and Duncan Bleek are dining Carstairs is murdered and the diamond stolen Holmes examines a coffin in the baggage carriage the coffin carries the body of the mother of Vivian Vedder one of the passengers Holmes discovers a secret compartment in the coffin large enough to hold a man When questioned Vedder admits that she was paid to transport the coffin Holmes admits that he had previously swapped the real diamond for a copy he gives the real diamond to Lestrade for safe keeping Holmes and Watson return to the baggage carriage and find the conductor murdered by a poison dart Duncan Bleek is joined by Sands the murderer who had previously hidden in the coffin Duncan Bleek tells him that Lestrade has the jewel and instructs him to obtain it Sands knocks Lestrade unconscious and steals the diamond but he is murdered by Duncan Bleek in the process The train picks up a group of policemen Holmes informs them that Duncan Bleek is really Moran Moran is arrested and the diamond discovered Just as he is about to be taken off the train Moran steals a policeman s gun the lights in the carriage go off and there is a scuffle When the lights come on Moran is being led from the train with a jacket over his head Holmes tells Watson that the police were Moran s accomplices He goes on to say that Moran is handcuffed under the table and that the false policemen had taken Lestrade who later arrests the men 32 53 Dressed to Kill 7 June 1946 Roy William Neill Original storyline Watson is visited by Julian Stinky Emery an old friend who tells him and Holmes of a strange robbery in his house the theft of a cheap music box from his collection Holmes listens to a similar cheap box which Emery had purchased That night Emery is murdered and the music box is stolen Holmes establishes that the music box was one of three identical boxes sold in an auction all of which had been made in Dartmoor Prison Holmes visits the second purchaser only to find the box has just been stolen He visits the third seller shortly before the murderers also visit he takes the box with him and deduces that the tunes all differ slightly and they contain a coded message to the location of stolen property While an attempt is made on Holmes s life the final box is stolen from Watson While Holmes escapes from his trap he and Watson finally crack the code and go to Samuel Johnson s house where they capture the criminals and obtain the printing plates for the 5 note 33 54 Colour versions and restoration Edit Split screen showing restored left and pre restored right image from The House of Fear 55 Four of the films Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon The Woman in Green Terror by Night and Dressed to Kill are in the public domain 56 In 2006 the four films were digitally restored and computer colourised by Legend Films who released the colour and black and white films on DVDs 57 58 The two 20th Century Fox films The Hound of the Baskervilles and The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes had survived complete and in good condition but those in the Universal series suffered badly over the years as they passed through the hands of different copyright owners 59 In 1993 the UCLA Film and Television Archive started a restoration project on the series after the unstable cellulose nitrate film was found to be suffering from deterioration 60 61 Restoration on the first six films The Woman in Green The Pearl of Death Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon The Scarlet Claw Terror by Night and The Spider Woman took four years from 1993 the costs for the restoration were met by UCLA and Hugh Hefner who was a fan of the Rathbone Holmes series From 1998 Warner Bros matched Hefner s funding and the remaining six films Dressed to Kill Pursuit to Algiers Sherlock Holmes Faces Death The House of Fear Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror and Sherlock Holmes in Washington were then restored a process that was completed in 2001 60 The restoration involved transferring the films onto modern polyester film and restoring the images frame by frame The process was complicated by the poor quality of some of the films Robert Gitt the UCLA Preservation Officer commented that the copies of the films that survive are many generations removed from the original and flaws have been photographed and re photographed into these copies The Scarlet Claw and Pursuit to Algiers were both in very poor condition and Dressed to Kill was missing some 35mm reels This being the case the restorers had to blow up some 16mm prints to replace the scenes 59 Notes and references EditNotes Edit All three actors also played other roles in the series Atwill also played Dr James Mortimer in The Hound of the Baskervilles 3 Daniell also played Sir Anthony Lloyd in Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror 26 William Easter in Sherlock Holmes in Washington 27 Zucco also played Richard Stanley aka Heinrich Hinkle in Sherlock Holmes in Washington 27 Cording played Camberwell in Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror 26 Jack Brady in Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon 28 Fred Garvin in The Spider Woman 29 George Gelder in The Pearl of Death 30 Captain Jack Simpson in The House of Fear 31 Mock in Terror by Night 32 Hamid in Dressed to Kill 33 Hamer played Major Langford in Sherlock Holmes Faces Death 34 Potts Tanner Ramson in The Scarlet Claw 35 Kingston in Pursuit to Algiers 36 Mr Shallcross in Terror by Night 32 De Becker played Peg Leg in Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon 28 Pub proprietor in Sherlock Holmes Faces Death 34 Boss in The Pearl of Death 30 Shabby man in The Woman in Green 37 References Edit a b Barnes 2011 p 253 Davies 1976 p 60 a b c The Hound of the Baskervilles AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 a b Davies 1976 p 64 Barnes 2011 p 21 a b Davies 1976 p 69 Marks 2008 p 79 Marks 2008 pp 84 85 Barnes 2011 pp 214 15 Bostrom 2018 p 241 a b Bostrom 2018 p 242 Langman amp Finn 1995b pp 250 51 Voice of Terror 2003 Langman amp Finn 1995a p 115 a b Macnab Geoffrey 12 July 2002 Friday review Crime and Punishment Sherlock Holmes might have been created for the cinema But playing him cost at least two actors their careers The Guardian London p 12 Davies 1976 p 71 Barnes 2011 p 210 Barnes 2011 p 58 a b c Davies 1976 p 102 Barnes 2011 p 254 Parkinson 2004 Barnes 2011 p 256 Harmon 2003 p 179 Harmon 2003 p 181 a b Hardy 1997 p 170 a b c Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 a b c Sherlock Holmes in Washington AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 a b c Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 a b The Spider Woman AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 a b c The Pearl of Death AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 a b The House of Fear AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 a b c Terror by Night AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 a b Dressed to Kill AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 a b c Sherlock Holmes Faces Death AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 a b The Scarlet Claw AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 a b Pursuit to Algiers AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 a b The Woman in Green AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 The Hound of the Baskervilles 1939 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes AFI Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved 2 August 2013 The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes 1939 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror 1942 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon 1942 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 Sherlock Holmes in Washington 1942 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 Sherlock Holmes Faces Death 1943 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 The Spider Woman 1943 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 Langman amp Finn 1995b p 250 The Scarlet Claw 1944 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 The Pearl of Death 1944 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 Sherlock Holmes and the House of Fear 1944 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 The Woman in Green 1945 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 Langman amp Finn 1995b p 314 Pursuit to Algiers 1945 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 Terror by Night 1946 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 Dressed to Kill 1946 Film amp TV Database British Film Institute Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2013 Secret Weapon 2003 American Film Technologies to Colorimage Public Domain Films PR Newswire 22 January 1988 Green Frank 28 July 2006 California company provides a newer look for older films Copley News Service Colorization amp Restoration Legend Films Retrieved 16 August 2013 a b Gitt 2003 a b Murphy Neil 6 January 2010 Under the Magnifying Glass Filmink Archived from the original on 30 December 2012 Retrieved 16 August 2013 Maher Adrian 12 June 1994 Reeling in the Past Los Angeles Times p 15 Sources Edit Barnes Alan 2011 Sherlock Holmes on Screen The Complete Screen History London Titan Books ISBN 978 0 8576 8776 0 Bostrom Mattias 2018 From Holmes to Sherlock Mysterious Press ISBN 978 0 8021 2789 1 Davies David Stuart 1976 Holmes of the Movies The Screen Career of Sherlock Holmes London New English Library ISBN 978 0 4500 3358 2 Gitt Robert 2003 Restoring Sherlock Holmes Featurette The Pearl of Death DVD MPI Media Group Hardy Phil ed 1997 The BFI Companion to Crime London Continuum ISBN 978 0 304 33215 1 Harmon Jim 2003 Radio Mystery and Adventure and Its Appearances in Film Television and Other Media Jefferson NC McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 7864 8508 6 Langman Larry Finn Daniel 1995a A Guide to American Crime Films of the Thirties Westport CT Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 0 313 29532 8 Langman Larry Finn Daniel 1995b A Guide to American Crime Films of the Forties and Fifties Westport CT Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 0 313 29265 5 Marks Jeffrey 2008 Anthony Boucher A Biobibliography Jefferson NC McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 7864 8388 4 Parkinson David 2004 Bruce William Nigel Ernle 1895 1953 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 57390 Retrieved 21 August 2013 Subscription or UK public library membership required Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon DVD MPI Media Group Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror DVD MPI Media Group External links EditThe Basil Rathbone Sherlock Holmes films on the Internet Movie Database A film clip of Sherlock Holmes Trailers is available at the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sherlock Holmes 1939 film series amp oldid 1130353592, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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