Sherlock Holmes
and the Secret Weapon
Dir: Roy William Neill
1943
***
Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon is the
fourth of fourteen in the Basil Rathbone/Nigel Bruce Sherlock
Holmes film series and already certain cracks were starting to show within the
franchise. The series is warmly regarded and I also love it but there are
serious issues with the story, continuity and the overall fact that hardly any
of it is the actual work of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon incorporates an idea
featured in the short story 'The Adventure of the Dancing Men' but apart from
the famous dancing men code, it's absolutely nothing like it. Made in the
early forties, The Secret Weapon sees Holmes contributing to the war
effort, as only Holmes can. The initial scene sees Holmes travel to Switzerland
to help smuggle out a brilliant Scientist who has agreed to help the British
with a revolutionary bomb sight he has developed. Holmes adopts the guise
of an elderly German bookseller (taken from Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock short
The Adventure of the Empty House, which was famously parodied in 1963's
The Pink Panther), tricks the Nazis and makes it back to London. There is a spy
element to the story that isn't really present in the Sherlock Holmes
books, it works in the beginning but soon gets tired and a little silly.
When the Scientist goes missing, Holmes follows the clues to his whereabouts
and discovers that his old foe Professor Moriarty is also searching for
the bomb sight that he plans on selling to the Nazis. Now Professor Moriarty is lots of things but i can't say I ever
saw him as a Nazi sympathizer. Like many fictional characters of the era, they
were developed to take sides, which I understand but I don't think it
really worked. Fascinating looking back at it now though but those continuity
errors really do let it down. For starters, Professor Moriarty died in The
Adventures of Sherlock Holmes which was only made four years previous and was
only two films before in the series. To confuse things further, Professor
Moriarty is played by Lionel Atwill, who played Dr Mortimer in 1939's The Hound
of the Baskervilles, the first film of the series. While Basil Rathbone
was on fine form, I'm afraid the same can't be said of Nigel Bruce,
although his Dr. Watson has a particularly poor script this time round.
The climax is pretty ridiculous, which almost undoes the suspense of the
code cracking story line. I'm rather fond of the series and I'm being kind with
my rating but all in all, these films were rushed, there wasn't enough care
taken with them and it really shows and they haven't dated well.
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