Genre | Titel [IMDb] | Jahr | Originaltitel [TMDb] | Regie | Land | min |
Crime, Drama, Mystery, Romance | Sherlock Holmes (Wontner) 2 - The Sign of Four | 1932 | Sherlock Holmes' Greatest Case | Graham Cutts | United Kingdom | 75 |
6,0 IMDb Nr.396 | Handlung A young woman turns to Sherlock Holmes for protection when she's menaced by an escaped killer seeking missing treasure. However, when the woman is kidnapped, Holmes and Watson must penetrate the city's criminal underworld to find her. Kommentar aus IMDb.com [Klicken zum Anzeigen] (by Snow Leopard on 8 July 2005) This Arthur Wontner version of the Sherlock Holmes story "The Sign of Four" is pretty good for the early sound era, and it makes good use of its limited resources. The production doesn't look very impressive, but Wontner is believable as Holmes, the story is entertaining, and some of the sets, though low budget, work well in establishing the atmosphere. Wontner's Holmes is less willful and forceful, while more witty and upbeat, than the more familiar portrayals by Basil Rathbone and Jeremy Brett. And while the fine Brett version of "The Sign of Four" is probably now the definitive screen version of the story, in its time this one would probably have been highly satisfactory to its audiences. The script adapts the original story somewhat, yet it works pretty well. The order of the narrative is simplified, and some extra settings and events are included. One of them, a sequence at a fair, is interesting, and though it changes the tone of the story somewhat, it works in its own right. The character of Jonathan Small is also fleshed out, with less about his past and more of an emphasis on what he is like at the present. As Athelney Jones, Gilbert Davis gets a few good moments of give-and-take with Holmes. Like Wontner's other Holmes features, this one has an obvious low-budget, early 1930s feel to it. But the series is worth seeing for anyone who enjoys the Holmes stories and who doesn't mind seeing the characters portrayed in a somewhat different light. | Darsteller Arthur Wontner ... Sherlock Holmes Isla Bevan ... Mary Morstan Ian Hunter ... Dr. Watson Graham Soutten ... Jonathan Small Miles Malleson ... Thaddeus Sholto Herbert Lomas ... Major Sholto Gilbert Davis ... Atherly Jones Margaret Yarde ... Mrs. Smith Roy Emerton ... The Tattooed Man Mr. Burnhett ... Tattoo Artist (uncredited) | ||||
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