The Triumph of Sherlock Holmes

5.3
19351h 24m

Holmes, retired to Sussex, is drawn into a last case when his arch enemy Moriarty arranges with an American gang to kill one John Douglas, a country gentleman with a mysterious past. Holmes' methods baffle Watson and Lestrade, but his results astonish them. In a long flashback, the victim's wife tells the story of the sinister Vermissa Valley.

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Cast

Photo of Arthur Wontner

Arthur Wontner

Sherlock Holmes

Photo of Lyn Harding

Lyn Harding

Prof. Moriarty

Photo of Leslie Perrins

Leslie Perrins

John Douglas

Photo of Ian Fleming

Ian Fleming

Dr. John Watson

Photo of Minnie Rayner

Minnie Rayner

Mrs. Hudson

Photo of Michael Shepley

Michael Shepley

Cecil Barker

Photo of Jane Carr

Jane Carr

Ettie Douglas

Photo of Ben Welden

Ben Welden

Ted Balding

Photo of Roy Emerton

Roy Emerton

Boss McGinty

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

Another efficient outing for Arthur Wontner and Ian Fleming as "Holmes" and "Watson" sees the renowned detective teased from retirement to investigate the mysterious, and rather brutal, death of a country gent at the hands of an American gang ("The Scowlers"). To start with, no-one is quite sure why this fellow had been slaughtered in the first place, but we soon start to get an inkling of the backstory from his widow "Ettie" (Jane Carr) and are promptly, as ever, on the trail of their arch-enemy "Moriarty". As with his 1931 iteration "The Sleeping Cardinal", Wontner presents us with a more sophisticated, measured, performance as the sleuth (he spends much of the film in his chair!), and Fleming offers a much more focussed - and, frankly, useful assistant as they work with the frequently baffled "Lestrade" (Charles Mortimer) to get to the bottom of the scheming Professor's latest outrageous scheme. In the best traditions of armchair cinema - the story is tightly constructed and the dialogue requires us to keep paying attention if we want to stay with them! For 1935, though, the standard of the production is pretty poor - and though it helps a bit on the atmosphere front, both the lighting and the audio make it a bit of a struggle to follow at times. Perhaps not for purists of the Conan Doyle serialisations, as it deviates a bit from his "Valley of Fear" (1914) Strand Magazine story but the suspense builds well and there is plenty to keep it interesting.

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