I was a great fan of Douglas Wilmer as Holmes when the series was first shown. (I never liked Cushing in the role). Hitherto I had been an adherent to Rathbone notwithstanding all the changes the later films made.
Wilmer is still alive, in his 90s I believe, and lives in East Anglia where he is now an artist.
He is also in the "Rivals of SH" series (available on dvd) as Van Dusen (the thinking machine) in which he is amazing.
He can also be seen in Oliviers Richard III, and the 60s epics, El Cid and Fall of the Roman Empire.
I don't question that the first two or three series with Brett are definitive. The last series, made when he was ill, are best forgotten.
I think future Holmes will find their place as Brett's fades in memory, a new generation emerges and TV itself changes in terms of the look and feel of programmes, so that the 1980s series looks dated.
I don't think Downey's Holmes is indicative of anything more than the impossibility of doing a "straight" Holmes while the memory of brett remains vivid.
Incientally, a favorite SH of mine is Robert Stephens (with Colin Blakely as Watson) in "The Private Life of SH" by Billy Wilder. Very funny, lots of cross-references to the books (especially the ones mentioned by never written) and some stunning one-liners.
Phil
Wilmer is still alive, in his 90s I believe, and lives in East Anglia where he is now an artist.
He is also in the "Rivals of SH" series (available on dvd) as Van Dusen (the thinking machine) in which he is amazing.
He can also be seen in Oliviers Richard III, and the 60s epics, El Cid and Fall of the Roman Empire.
I don't question that the first two or three series with Brett are definitive. The last series, made when he was ill, are best forgotten.
I think future Holmes will find their place as Brett's fades in memory, a new generation emerges and TV itself changes in terms of the look and feel of programmes, so that the 1980s series looks dated.
I don't think Downey's Holmes is indicative of anything more than the impossibility of doing a "straight" Holmes while the memory of brett remains vivid.
Incientally, a favorite SH of mine is Robert Stephens (with Colin Blakely as Watson) in "The Private Life of SH" by Billy Wilder. Very funny, lots of cross-references to the books (especially the ones mentioned by never written) and some stunning one-liners.
Phil
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