The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes By Tom Keogh
This 1970 Billy Wilder comedy-drama about a major defeat in the career
of Sherlock Holmes may have little to do with the legacy of Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle, but in its uncut form it happens to be one of the finest
films of the decade. Robert Stephens makes a perfectly splendid Holmes,
brilliant, sophisticated, and deeply flawed, while Colin Blakely plays Dr.
Watson as a drinker and ladies' man with more personality and intelligence
than is often granted him by filmmakers. The case (which has some echoes
of Doyle's story "The Bruce-Partington Plans") begins with
Holmes aiding the distressed Madame Valladon (Geneviève Page), who is
searching for her missing husband. The inquiry shifts to Scotland, and
despite a stern warning from the hero's brother, Mycroft Holmes
(Christopher Lee), Sherlock pursues events that reveal a top-secret
government plan. Lush, energetic, funny, gorgeous to look at, and
ultimately tragic, the film is layered with Wilder's familiar collision of
cynicism and yearning, hope and betrayal, grace and isolation.
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