Sherlock Holmes — Film Review dvd download
I really liked this movie. I thought it was interesting and funny. Maybe it’s going to get shot aside with all the other great movies out right now (AVATAR=love) but i really thought it was worth seeing.
It’s amazing how much crap Ritchie gets despite making amazing movies. I guess people don’t like out-of-the -box, stylized, and witty movies, oh well their loss.
In this corner is Guy Ritchie, master of visual con-game action movies that tend toward all-style-no-substance. In that corner is Sherlock Holmes, the cerebral master sleuth who solves crimes with quiet deduction, intense concentration and a seven-percent solution. It’s no contest: The winner is Ritchie in a pyrotechnical knockout.
“Sherlock Holmes” goes wrong in many ways except for one — at the boxoffice. Credit action uber-producer Joel Silver for recognizing that the only way to revive Sherlock Holmes for contemporary audiences is by turning him into Jason Bourne and hiring someone like Ritchie to overload the senses with chases, fights, effects, editing, bombastic noise and music. Warner Bros. should have a large hit this holiday season with “(Not) Sherlock Holmes.”
Even the Holmes/Watson pairing is odd, but if the film concentrated at all on character, it might have worked. Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law certainly don’t fit previous castings, which is fine, only they’re a little too much alike. Both are glib, smart, good-looking guys and fine actors of about the same age and build. If Downey would hand his pipe to Law, they could switch roles from scene to scene.
The two banter a lot with faux hostility, which adds little to what the film takes for wit and subtracts a good deal from whatever suspense the action is meant to generate. If the protagonists crack wise, what danger can they possibly be in?
Each is given a love interest of sorts: Kelly Reilly as Watson’s fiancee, who doesn’t much care for his pal, and Rachel McAdams as “the only woman ever to have bested Holmes.” All of which might have been interesting if the women didn’t disappear for chunks of the movie.
The plot? Wish you hadn’t asked. One is not meant to completely understand it, of course; you never do in a Ritchie movie. McAdams’ Irene Adler drops by Baker Street when Holmes is in one of his stir-crazy fits — this happens whenever he’s between cases. She pays him to find a missing midget.
Before Holmes can say, “The game’s afoot,” he and a reluctant Watson are ensnared with ritualistic murders, black magic, a diabolical magician (Mark Strong), a resurrection from the grave and an attack on Parliament right out of the Gunpower Plot of 1605. All that’s missing is Guy Fawkes.
Opens: Friday, Dec. 25 (Warner Bros.)
Production: Silver Pictures, Lin Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, Wigram Prods.
Cast: Robert Downey Jr., Jude Law, Rachel McAdams, Mark Strong, Eddie Marsan, Kelly Reilly, James Fox, William Hope
Director: Guy Ritchie
Screenwriters: Michael Robert Johnson, Anthony Peckham, Simon Kinberg
Screen Story by: Lionel Wigram, Michael Robert Johnson
Based on characters created by: Arthur Conan Doyle
Producers: Joel Silver, Dan Lin, Lionel Wigram, Susan Downey
Executive producers: Bruce Berman, Michael Tadross
Director of photography: Philippe Rousselot
Production designer: Sarah Greenwood
Music: Hans Zimmer
Costume designer: Jenny Beavan
Editor: James Herbert
Rated PG-13, 128 minutes

