#Sherlock Holmes 1965
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finalproblem · 3 days ago
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Sherlockian Wednesday Watchalongs: Comfort Food
Sherlock Holmes: The Sign of Four (1968 TV episode)
Peter Cushing’s Holmes tackles the second canon story in the second-to-last episode of this adaptation.
We'll watch and chat live at 8:30 pm US Eastern time (click for your local date/time).
Anyone is welcome to join us, even if you've discovered this post randomly out in the tags. See you this evening in The Giant Chat of Sumatra!
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lexie-squirrel · 1 year ago
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holmesiansource · 9 months ago
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A STUDY IN TERROR (1965) dir. James Hill
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iratesherlock · 2 years ago
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* A STUDY IN TERROR / ENGLISH / 1H 35M / 1965
— John Neville as Sherlock Holmes and Donald Houston as John Watson. — Directed by James Hill and distributed by Columbia Pictures. — Favorite Quality: The song that Georgia Brown sings at the beginning of the movie is still stuck in my head. I never want it to leave.
I don’t think I could adequately explain what happened in this movie, though not necessarily in a negative way. This movie is about the concept of Sherlock Holmes solving the case of Jack the Ripper; however, for a film about Jack the Ripper, there was almost nothing about the actual investigation—what there was also entirely inaccurate. Of course, the movie is about Sherlock Holmes, and nothing else needs to be factual to be enjoyable, though it made the plot hard to follow during the middle of the movie. I did not dislike this movie, I did not like it, but I still had an okay time while watching it and did burst out laughing during some parts (not when I was supposed to be laughing, I don’t think). It was difficult to be invested in the story as I did not care about this version of John and Sherlock; they were entertaining, and I loved how flamboyant Sherlock was at times, but overall they weren’t memorable in the least. The soundtrack for this movie was fantastic; I think Georgia Brown’s introduction song will be in my head for a long time; whenever the characters were in the tavern, I was having the time of my life. They were the best scenes in the movie. Also, this is a movie made in the sixties, all the action scenes had bongos playing aggressively in the background, and I love bongo music. When it comes to any variant of Sherlock solving the Jack the Ripper case, there will never be a police reveal of the villain, which I prefer, and I’m glad this movie followed that trend. The climax and reveal of the killer were so, so, so confusing. There was a fight, there was fire, and there was the funniest scream I will ever hear in any media in my entire life (I watched this movie at work and was very embarrassed when I started laughing so hard I cried); it was not a good ending if I’m being honest. It wasn’t terrible, and, quite frankly, I would watch this movie again because of how camp-like it was. The one quality about this Sherlock I enjoyed was how feral he often came across as—he was violent, made threats, and got so excited to show off his cane sword to John after they got attacked on their prostitute dinner date. I also did not make that piece up, Sherlock took John to dinner in Whitechapel, and John had the time of his life. Finally, I want to thank this movie; it had such a pretty design of Sherlock and John’s apartment, it was in very few frames, but it looked so cozy.
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angryducktimemachine · 6 months ago
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Unfortunately the beverage umbrella is still on my mind.
[ID: a digital drawing of Watson in black and white. He's holding an umbrella from which he unscrewed the handle to use like a cup. /End ID]
Finished watching the 1967 WDR Adaptation of Sherlock Holmes and that certainly was. An experience.
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alightinthelantern · 1 year ago
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Movies on Youtube:
Brief Encounter (1945, David Lean)
Opening Night (1977, John Cassavetes)
Close Up (1990, Abbas Kiarostami)
Taste of Cherry (1997, Abbas Kiarostami)
The Song of Sparrows (2008,  Majid Majidi)
Russian Ark (2002, Alexander Sokurov)
Dreams (1990, Akira Kurosawa)
Dersu Uzala (1975, Akira Kurosawa)
The Idiot (1951, Akira Kurosawa)
Drunken Angel (1948, Akira Kurosawa)
Tokyo Story (1953, Yasujirō Ozu)
Early Summer (1951, Yasujirō Ozu)
Late Spring (1949, Yasujirō Ozu)
The Flavor of Green Tea over Rice (1952, Yasujirō Ozu)
Good Morning (1959, Yasujirō Ozu)
An Autumn Afternoon (1962, Yasujirō Ozu)
Sword for Hire (1952, Inagaki Hiroshi)
Rebecca (1940, Alfred Hitchcock)
Thunderbolt (1929, Josef von Sternberg)
Larceny (1948, George Sherman)
Among the Living (1941, Stuart Heisler)
Andrei Rublev (1966, Andrei Tarkovsky)
Mirror (1975, Andrei Tarkovsky)
Solaris (1972, Andrei Tarkovsky)
Ivan’s Childhood (1962, Andrei Tarkovsky)
Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972, Werner Herzog)
Fitzcarraldo (1982, Werner Herzog)
Medea (1969, Pier Paolo Pasolini)
Medea (filmed stageplay)
Is It Easy To Be Young? (1986, Juris Podnieks)
We'll Live Till Monday (1968, Stanislav Rostotsky)
Ordinary Fascism (aka Triumph Over Violence) (1965, Mikhail Romm)
Battleship Potemkin (1925, Sergei Eisenstein)
The Third Man (1949, Carol Reed)
Johnny Come Lately (1943, William K. Howard)
Mister 880 (1950, Edmund Goulding)
Beethoven’s Eroica (2003, Simon Cellan Jones)
Katyn (2007, Andrzej Wajda)
Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events (2004, Brad Silberling)
Mean Girls (2004, Mark Waters)
The Neverending Story (1984, Wolfgang Petersen)
The NeverEnding Story II: The Next Chapter (1990, George T. Miller)
The Thief and the Cobbler (Richard Williams)
Osmosis Jones (2001, myriad directors)
Megamind (2010, Tom McGrath)
Ghost in the Shell (1995, Mamoru Oshii)
Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence (2004, Mamoru Oshii)
Steamboy (2004, Katsuhiro Otomo)
Badlands (1973), Terrence Malick
Wargames (1983, John Badham)
By the White Sea (2022, Aleksandr Zachinyayev)
White Moss (2014, Vladimir Tumayev)
The Theme (1979, Gleb Panfilov)
The Duchess (2008, Saul Dibb)
Bed and Sofa (1927, Abram Room)
Fate of a Man (1959, Sergei Bondarchuk)
Ballad of a Soldier (1959, Grigory Chukhray)
Uncle Vanya (1970, Andrey Konchalovskiy)
An Unfinished Piece for Mechanical Piano (1977, Nikita Mikhalkov)
Family Relations (1981, Nikita Mikhalkov)
The Seagull (1970, Yuli Karasik)
My Tender and Affectionate Beast (1978, Emil Loteanu)
Dreams (1993, Karen Shakhnazarov & Alexander Borodyansky)
The Vanished Empire (2008, Karen Shakhnazarov)
Winter Evening in Gagra (1985, Karen Shakhnazarov)
Day of the Full Moon (1998, Karen Shakhnazarov)
Zero Town (1989, Karen Shakhnazarov)
The Girls (1961, Boris Bednyj)
The Diamond Arm (1969, Leonid Gaidai)
Operation Y and Shurik's Other Adventures (1965, Leonid Gaidai)
Ivan Vasilievich Changes Profession (1973, Leonid Gaidai)
Unbelievable Adventures of Italians in Russia (1974, Eldar Ryazanov & Franco Prosperi)
Office Romance (1977, Eldar Ryazanov)
Carnival Night (1956, Eldar Ryazanov)
Hussar Ballad (1962, Eldar Ryazanov)
Kin-dza-dza! (1986, Georgiy Daneliya)
The Most Charming and Attractive (1985, Gerald Bezhanov)
Autumn (1974, Andrei Smirnov)
War and Peace: Part 1 (1966, Sergei Bondarchuk)
War and Peace: Part 2 (1966, Sergei Bondarchuk)
War and Peace: Part 3 (1967, Sergei Bondarchuk)
War and Peace: Part 4 (1967, Sergei Bondarchuk)
The Red Tent (first half) (1969, Mikhail Kalatozov)
The Red Tent (second half) (1969, Mikhail Kalatozov)
Sherlock Holmes: The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939, Sidney Lanfield)
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1939, Alfred L. Werker)
Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror (1942, John Rawlins)
Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon (1943, Roy William Neill)
Sherlock Holmes in Washington (1943, Roy William Neill)
Sherlock Holmes Faces Death (1943, Roy William Neill)
Sherlock Holmes: The Spider Woman (1944, Roy William Neill)
Sherlock Holmes: The Scarlet Claw (1944, Roy William Neill)
Sherlock Holmes: The Pearl of Death (1944, Roy William Neill)
Sherlock Holmes: The House of Fear (1945, Roy William Neill)
Sherlock Holmes: The Woman in Green (1945, Roy William Neill)
Sherlock Holmes: Pursuit to Algiers (1945, Roy William Neill)
Sherlock Holmes: Terror by Night (1946, Roy William Neill)
Sherlock Holmes: Dressed to Kill (1946, Roy William Neill)
If any of the links don’t work, try looking up the film in this playlist: link
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detectivejay · 4 months ago
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Here's a poll for a character who gets some of the most varied and perhaps divisive adaptations across Sherlock media, despite only appearing in the original canon stories once, in A Scandal in Bohemia. Whether she's someone who's gained his respect, an ex, an enemy or a friend, portrayals of Irene Adler have run the gamut and The Woman continues to capture the imagination of folks producing Sherlock adaptations any time she appears.
Please reblog for a larger sample size! :) I'm curious especially if there's been any book adaptations that have been well done.
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vintagestagehotties · 6 months ago
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Hot Vintage Stage Actress Round 4
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Maude Fealy: Alice Faulkner in Sherlock Holmes (1901 West End); Anner Tillotson in Hearts Courageous (1903 Broadway); Ophelia in Hamlet (1905 Denver)
Ruby Dee: Libby George in Jeb (1946 Broadway); Ruth Younger in A Raisin in the Sun (1959 Broadway); Lutiebell Gussie Mae Jenkins in Purlie Victorious (1961 Broadway); Cordelia in King Lear (1965 American Shakespeare)
Propaganda under the cut.
Maude Fealy:
there’s no way no one else has submitted her but i can’t risk this absolute goddess not getting through
Ruby Dee:
Beautiful and talented! She's in the American Theater Hall of Fame for a reason! And that doesn't even speak to her work as a civil rights activist and a woman who didn't back down easily.
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stephensmithuk · 1 year ago
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The Illustrious Client
First published in the US in 1924 and the UK in 1925, the latter as a two-parter, this forms part of Case-book.
The first part in The Strand ends with Watson seeing the newspaper headline about the attack on Holmes.
Northumberland Avenue is a street running from Trafalgar Square to the Thames Embankment. It includes a pub called The Sherlock Holmes.
The Carlton Club was founded by the Conservative Party and was long its defacto headquarters. Originally on Carlton Terrace, it moved to Pall Mall in 1835, with the building rebuilt in 1856. A direct hit by a German bomb in 1940 destroyed the building and the Club moved to 69 St James's Street, former home of Arthur's Club. Women were not allowed to be associate members until the 1970s and not full members until 2008, with Margaret Thatcher getting honorary membership when she become Tory leader in 1975. She later become club president in 2009, although by his point she had dementia and died in 2013.
The general consensus is that the "Illustrious Client" is no less than Edward VII himself, who Holmes may have previously gotten the Beryl Coronet back for.
Prague was then under Austrian rule.
The Splügen Pass, used for travel since Roman times, connects Switzerland and Italy and with its great height, hairpins and spectacular views, is considered one of the greatest driving challenges on the planet, having featured in Top Gear. The San Bernandino tunnel has taken most of the non-tourist traffic and it is now closed in winter for safety reasons.
Kingston upon Thames, known as Kingston for short, is a town located 10 miles SW of Charing Cross. Until 1965, it was in Surrey before becoming part of Greater London and part of the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames. Surrey County Council were based there until 2021, when their offices moved to Reigate.
The Hurlingham Club in Fulham is where horse polo's rules were established - it even hosted Olympic polo in the 1908 London Games, but the fields were compulsorily purchased by the local council after the Second World War for housing. It was also home to pigeon shooting and was home of world croquet, still holding major events in the latter. Edward VII was a keen patron of the site.
Charlie Peace was an English burglar and double murderer, executed in 1879. He ended up featuring in Madame Tussaud's Chamber of Horrors, which was oddly enough replaced between 2016 and 2022 with an immersive Sherlock Holmes Experience... which at £66.50 a ticket was a bit too expensive.
HMP Parkhurst, a Category B prison located on the Isle of Wight, merged in 2009 with HMP Albany to form HMP Isle of Wight, although each part retains its own name. Notable inmates include the Kray Twins, Peter Sutcliffe, Ian Brady and currently Serbian war criminal Radovan Karadžić.
Hypnotism was rather in vogue by this time.
Apaches were the name given to various criminal gangs in Paris; named after the Native American tribe. There are various suggestions as to how that came about.
Montmartre, in the 18th arrondissement of Paris, was widely known for its artistic community during this time, with many a famous name living there due to the low rents. It's still there and development is restricted due to the historic character. Pigalle, Paris's red-light district, is next door.
Kitty Winter would feature as a character in Elementary, played by Ophelia Lovibond. Gruner turns up as well.
"Tinker’s curse" is Kitty saying, in the language of the time, that she does not give an [expletive deleted].
Ruritania is a fictional country first featured in the 1894 Anthony Hope novel The Prisoner of Zenda. It has become a byword for quaint small European countries in Central and Eastern Europe.
China was still an Empire in 1902, nominally ruled by the Guangxu Emperor, aka Zaitan, but an 1898 coup resulted in his loss of any real power; he was even in house arrest for a while. He died in 1908, probably poisoned by arsenic. His nephew, Puyi, would be the last Chinese Emperor and is beyond the scope of this article.
I cannot discuss Chinese pottery in any depth and so will not attempt to.
Some husbands might have questioned the gallantry of King Edward VII, who had a box for his mistresses at his coronation.
Armorial bearings are the "shield" part of a coat of arms. The British royal one traditionally depicted a bare-breasted woman as part of the harp on the bottom left, but this is no longer standard practice.
Edward VII, while having no actual political power, was able to exercise quite a bit of influence behind the scenes, especially in foreign and defence policy.
All criminal prosecutions are brought in the name of the monarch, rendered "R" (Rex or Regina) in text and "the Crown" when spoken). i.e. R vs. Winter. In addition, judicial reviews (i.e. is this government decision legal) are also brought in the name of the monarch, with the name of the actual plaintiff in brackets since a 2001 change to the format, e.g. R (Smith) vs. Secretary of State for the Home Department. It is common for initials to be used in those brackets to protect the identity of a plaintiff, such as the recent decision on flying migrants to Rwanda.
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finalproblem · 10 days ago
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Sherlockian Wednesday Watchalongs: Comfort Food
The world can be… a lot. So we're settling in with some of the faves we love to return to.
Wednesday, October 13 Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon (1942) Basil Rathbone's Holmes takes on the Nazis! (And wins. Just to be clear.)
Wednesday, October 20 Sherlock Holmes: The Sign of Four (1968 TV episode) Peter Cushing's Holmes tackles the second canon story in the second-to-last episode of this adaptation.
Wednesday, October 27 Sherlock Holmes: Die Bruce-Partington-Pläne (aka The Bruce-Partington Plans, 1968 TV episode) Our final premiere of homebrew English subtitles for this series!
Here’s the deal: Like Sherlock Holmes? You’re welcome to join us in The Giant Chat of Sumatra’s #giantchat text channel to watch and discuss with us. Just find a copy of the episode or movie we’re watching, and come make some goofy internet friends.
Keep an eye on my #the giant chat of sumatra tag and the calendar for updates on future chat events.
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lexie-squirrel · 1 year ago
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theolikeworld · 11 months ago
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1. Dr, Victor Frankenstein - Hammer Frankenstein series
2. Doctor Van Helsing - Horror of Dracula (1958)
3. Sherlock Holmes - Hound of the Baskervilles (1959)
4. John Banning - The Mummy (1959)
5. Dr. John Rollason - The Abominable Snowman (1957)
6. Mr. Smith - Asylum (1972)
7. General Spieldorf - The Vampire Lovers (1970)
8. Dr. Wells - Horror Express (1972)
9. Herbert Flay - Madhouse (1974)
10. Dr. Christopher Maitland - The Skull (1965)
11. Dr. Namaroff - The Gorgon (1964)
12. Philip Grayson - The House That Dripped Blood (1971)
13. SS Commander - Shock Waves (1977)
14. Frederick Utterson - I, Monster (1971)
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mamusiq · 1 year ago
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Maria Callas photographed by Cecil Beaton in 1957
Callas (2024) Callas is a film directed by Niki Caro with Noomi Rapace. Synopsis: A biopic about the operatic star, Maria Callas.
Noomi Rapace Star As Maria Callas announced at the Cannes Film Festival, Noomi Rapace is currently training her vocal cords in preparation for a starring role as Maria Callas.
The biopic is centered on the passionate relationship the singer had with Greek tycoon Aristotle Onassis lasting almost two decades. Caro will direct “Callas” from a screenplay she adapted from Alfonso Signorini’s biography “Too Proud, Too Fragile.”
Callas was a profoundly influential American opera singer of Greek heritage. She died in 1977 at the age of 53.
“This movie is about an extraordinary woman whose deepest desire is to lead an ordinary life with the man of her choice,” said Guido De Angelis. “Callas was la Divina, a goddess, who just wanted to be a normal woman; she found out she couldn’t. It sounds like an ancient myth.”
Rapace’s credits include “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo,” “Prometheus,” “Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows” and “The Drop.” Caro directed “McFarland USA,” “North Country” and “Whale Rider.”
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Maria Callas sings Puccini: Tosca - 'Vissi d'Arte' at Covent Garden 1964
Maria Callas' final appearance on the operatic stage was in Tosca ​at Covent Garden's 1965 Royal Gala. ​​​For many opera lovers, Maria Callas and Tosca's Vissi d'Arte ​are inseparable. "I lived for art; I lived for love" became La Divina's cri de coeur, ​​​​her swansong, the perfect expression of her own triumphs and tragedies. This unrivaled recording is from that legendary Zeffirelli production in 1964 and is one of just many jewels in the Maria Callas Live edition.
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Vissi d'arte, vissi d'amore, non feci mai male ad anima viva! Con man furtiva quante miserie conobbi aiutai. Sempre con fè sincera la mia preghiera ai santi tabernacoli salì. Sempre con fè sincera diedi fiori agl'altar. Nell'ora del dolore perché, perché, Signore, perché me ne rimuneri così? Diedi gioielli della Madonna al manto, e diedi il canto agli astri, al ciel, che ne ridean più belli. Nell'ora del dolor perché, perché, Signor, ah, perché me ne rimuneri così?
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callmebrycelee · 9 months ago
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MAN CRUSH MONDAY
ROBERT DOWNEY JR.
Robert John Downey Jr. was born April 4, 1965 in Manhattan, New York. The 58-year-old actor is best known for his numerous film and television roles including Tony Stark in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), Sherlock Holmes in Sherlock Holmes and Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows; Larry Paul on Ally McBeal; Harry Lockhart in Kiss Kiss Bang Bang; Paul Avery in Zodiac; Kirk Lazarus in Tropic Thunder; and Lewis Strauss in Oppenheimer. Robert is 5 feet and 8 inches tall.
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holmesoldfellow · 6 months ago
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Directory
Hello! I figured its time to make a blog tag guide for all your post finding needs. All my posts are tagged with a shorthand tag, while original posts have more thorough tagging. I have also added a list of links to my various Holmes playlists, where you can watch adaptations and listen to themes.
Join the community @@holmesian-mantlepiece
All original posts: #sherlock holmes
#acd: posts referencing Sir Arthur Conan Doyle himself, the original text of the ACD canon Holmes, or other mentions of specifically ACD Holmes. Original posts: #sir arthur conan doyle
#book cover: photos of book covers or spines (generally with the exception of comic books)
#newspaper: newspaper or magazine mentions of Sherlock Holmes
#advertising: advertising using Holmes imagery
#comics: comics or comic books referencing Sherlock Holmes. Original posts about the Dynamite comics: #dynamite holmes.
#museum: photos of the Sherlock Holmes Museum in London.
#location: Holmesian locations other than the museum, often referring to the Sherlock Holmes pub, various cafes, or statues.
#paget: illustrations by Sidney Paget
#illustration: illustrations not by Sidney Paget.
#meme: memes and textposts
TV Shows and Movies (in chronological order)
William Gillette in plays (1899) and "Sherlock Holmes" (1916): #gillette
"Sherlock Holmes" with John Barrymore (1922): #barrymore
"Sherlock Jr." directed by and featuring Buster Keaton (1924): #jr
Arthur Wontner films "The Sleeping Cardinal" (1931), "The Missing Rembrandt" (1932), "The Sign of Four: Sherlock Holmes' Greatest Case" (1932), "The Triumph of Sherlock Holmes" (1935), and "Silver Blaze" (1937): #wontner
"Sherlock Holmes" with Basil Rathbone (1939-46): #rathbone
"Sherlock Holmes" with Ronald Howard (1954): #howard #ronald howard
Christopher Lee in "Sherlock Holmes and the Deadly Necklace" (1962) and other productions: #lee
"Sherlock Holmes" with Douglas Wilmer (1964-1965, plus other appearances): #wilmer
"Sherlock Holmes" with Peter Cushing (1968): #cushing
"The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes" directed and written by Billy Wilder (1970): #tplosh #the private life of sherlock holmes
Theater productions (1970s) and "Interior Motives" (1976) with Leonard Nimoy: #nimoy
"The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother" written, directed, and featuring Gene Wilder (1975): #brother
"The Seven Percent Solution" written by Nicholas Meyer and featuring Nicol Williamson (1976): #seven percent
"Murder by Decree" with Christopher Plummer (1979): #decree #murder by decree
"Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson" with Geoffrey Whitehead and Donald Pickering (1979): #whitehead
"The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson" with Vasiliy Livanov (Soviet Holmes) (1979-1986): #livanov
"The Hound of the Baskervilles" with Tom Baker (1982): #baker
Ian Richardson in "The Sign of Four" (1983) and "The Hound of the Baskervilles" (1983) and other productions: #richardson
"The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" with Jeremy Brett (Granada) (1984-94): #granada #granada holmes
"Young Sherlock Holmes" directed by Barry Levinson (1985): #young #young sherlock holmes
"Detective Conan"/"Case Closed" manga by Gosho Aoyama (1994) and anime (1996): #case closed
"Sherlock Holmes" (2009) and "Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows" (2011) directed by Guy Ritchie and featuring Robert Downey Jr.: #rdj
"Elementary" with Johnny Lee Miller and Lucy Liu (2014-2019): #elementary
"Moriarty the Patriot" manga (2016) and anime (2020): #ynm
#german: German productions of Sherlock Holmes, such as “Der Hund von Baskerville” (1937) and "Sherlock Holmes" with Erich Schellow (1967)
#animated: Animated series and references to Sherlock Holmes, such as "Sherlock Hound" (1984), "The Great Mouse Detective" (1986), and "Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century" (1999)
#theater: Theater productions about Sherlock Holmes
#playbill: Playbills for Holmesian theater productions, including William Gillette's play
#radio: Audio series productions relating to Sherlock Holmes, including "The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" (1939-47), "Moriarty: The Devil's Game" (2022), and "Sherlock & Co." (2023)
#multi: posts that combine several adaptations of Sherlock Holmes in one.
Video Games- #video game: (mostly original) posts about video games
#frogwares: content pertaining to the Sherlock Holmes game series by Frogwares. Original posts are under #frogwares sherlock
#ace attorney: content relating to the game "The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles" (2021)
Merchandise- #merchandise: physical merchandise relating to Sherlock Holmes. A non-exhaustive list of subcategories:
#stuffed animal
#doll
#mini figure
#ceramics
#teapot
#ornament
#sweatshirt
#sweater
#tea blend
#playing cards
#other: Everything else! Usually non-listed adaptations or crossovers.
*Please note that none of my posts are intended to be advertisements or promotions, I just like collecting different interpretations of the great detective.
Links
My playlists:
Miscellaneous adaptations
German Holmes
Christmas with Holmes
Spotify playlist of musical themes
Other folks playlists I use for shows:
Granada Holmes
Howard/1954 Holmes
Douglas Wilmer Holmes (1964)
Young Sherlock Holmes: The Mystery of the Manor House (1982)
Sherlock Hound
Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century
Sherlock Mondays (2023 verbal annotation of Holmes stories by the Rosenbach museum)
Sherlock Holmes audio dramas by Big Finish
My DMs, asks, and submissions are always open for those interested! Let me know if you'd like me to tag something for you, or find an adaptation for you. Ask questions, or just chat. See ya!
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missanthropicprinciple · 20 days ago
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Tagged by @headgehug - Thank you!! <3 (it's now November oops)
🎃 october 2024 edition 🎃
last song: Candyman - Christina Aguilera
last book: still reading all of Sherlock Holmes
last movie: That Darn Cat (1965) last night but the last film I watched that was new to me was Vibes (1988)
last tv show: Jeeves and Wooster rn and also Cardcaptor Sakura
sweet/savory/spicy: savory! but also spicy
relationship status: sadly single
last thing I searched: Eric Sykes and Terry-Thomas films - they were only in three films together - a crime!!
current obsession: FRUiTS magazine
looking forward to: I was less enthusiastic about it this year because of work and such, which is sad because it's my favorite holiday other than the autumnal equinox
go for it: @jamieaiken919 @pokemonandcatsmostly @safetytree
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