Originally posted by pinkmoon
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Originally posted by GUT View PostOr the mighty P76Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
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I would put Jeremy Brett at the top for playing Holmes the closest to the character as written.
I think Rathbone and Cumberbatch are both fine actors, but their turns as Holmes suffer a little for being set in different time periods. Same as "Elementary" star Johnny Lee Miller.
So my list would be:
Jeremy Brett
Basil Rathbone (after all, he was the first I saw, when his movies were on TV)
Benedict Cumberthach
Johnny Lee Miller
Robert Downey Jr.Pat D. https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/reading.gif
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Von Konigswald: Jack the Ripper plays shuffleboard. -- Happy Birthday, Wanda June by Kurt Vonnegut, c.1970.
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Originally posted by Pcdunn View PostI would put Jeremy Brett at the top for playing Holmes the closest to the character as written.
I think Rathbone and Cumberbatch are both fine actors, but their turns as Holmes suffer a little for being set in different time periods. Same as "Elementary" star Johnny Lee Miller.
So my list would be:
Jeremy Brett
Basil Rathbone (after all, he was the first I saw, when his movies were on TV)
Benedict Cumberthach
Johnny Lee Miller
Robert Downey Jr."The truth is what is, and what should be is a fantasy. A terrible, terrible lie that someone gave to the people long ago."- Lenny Bruce
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Originally posted by Steadmund Brand View PostChristopher Plummer
Rathbone
Downey
Plummer
John Neville
Peter Cushing
Sir Christopher Lee
Cumberbatch
Brett
Johnny Lee Miller
Ronald Howard
Best Moriarty's:
Andrew Scott (I love watching this fun loving psycho in action!)
George Zucco
Lionel Atwill
Henry Daniell
Special mention - Leo McKern, as a comic "Moriarty" in the movie "Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother".
Jeff
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For me the definitive Holmes has always been Basil Rathbone. I have a fondness for the series of films he starred in even if dear old Nigel Bruce did play a buffoonish Watson. Many of the actors who portrayed Holmes though were really years too old to play Holmes in his prime. Wontner was in his mid-fifties, Rathbone late forties, for example.
We know that William Gillette played Sherlock Holmes on stage. Presumably Conan Doyle saw his performance at some time. I wonder whether he ever saw any Sherlock Holmes films, the silent 'The Return of Sherlock Holmes' with Clive Brook in 1929, for instance, and what his reaction would have been.
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I certainly haven't viewed them all but Reginald Owen is, in my opinion, the worst Holmes I've seen. Others must have agreed because I think he only played him once.This my opinion and to the best of my knowledge, that is, if I'm not joking.
Stan Reid
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Originally posted by sdreid View PostI certainly haven't viewed them all but Reginald Owen is, in my opinion, the worst Holmes I've seen. Others must have agreed because I think he only played him once.
I do like Owen, who was a good actor in dramatic parts (he's the greedy claim jumping villain in "The Call of the Wild" with Clark Gable and Jack Oakie), and comic roles ("Petticoat Fever" - try to catch the unreal dinner party scene where Owen sticks out like a sore thumb without planning to do so). Of course he is best recalled for the 1938 turn as Ebenezer Scrooge in "A Christmas Carol" - possibly the best performance in that role until eclipsed by Alistair Sim and George C. Scott.
Jeff
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