The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
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What is better: Book or movie(the 1 with Robert Downey Jr.)?
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Jasmine
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Mar 06, 2012 05:44PM

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Downey's Sherlock feels like the drug-addicted slacker genius misanthropic pugilist bohemian Holmes of the stories. By contrast, the Rathbone films feel like an entirely different character, more like Hercule Poirot than Sherlock Holmes.
The only real departures the new movies have from the stories is the fact that Watson isn't the narrator, but they definitely have that flavor to it, like a bit of seasoning, and the fact that (in the books) Holmes actually *did* manage to clean himself up in order to mix with high society and was described as fastidious about his appearance. Overall, though, those are minor changes compared to the wholesale butchering the classic films did to the source material.

No offense to anyone that loved the classic movies.. but they needed to desperately work on the characters.
I recommend both the new movies and the books ^_^


I saw the first episode of the TV series and liked it quite a lot. Although it is hard to imagine Cumberbatch as a former back-alley brawler, the other aspects of Homes' personality seem to be there.


I really like the movies with RDJ and Jude Law. I was however disappointed with some of the liberties that they took in the last movie. I just read the book that corresponds, and a lot of it was not how it happened in the movie.

Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law performed very well, but the movies themselves were bad in my opinion.


The first season (3 episodes) is on Netflix.

the movie and the book cannot be compared as both are superior in a league of its own

..."
It may not be exact, but it's pretty darn close. The closest ever rendered on the big screen. I kind of wonder why people keep saying it's so different, because the behaviors of RDJ and the place he lives are taken directly from the stories.
Doyle described Holmes as a brutal barroom bareknuckle brawler, a slacker with a cocaine addiction, living in a sty of an apartment and someone who hates high society. Later he's described as being able to dress up and play nice (the better to blend in, one would guess), but mostly he's an antisocial genius. We are told Holmes keeps his cigars in a little bucket, sticks his mail to the fireplace mantel with a knife and keeps his pipe tobacco in his slippers.
That's a slovenly guy for all his brilliance, and I think the Ritchie films pull that off perfectly. It's different from the classic movies starring Rathbone, but those films took more liberties with Holmes than Jon Peters wanted to do with Superman. "Superman should have body guards. And he shouldn't wear the suit. The suit is gay. Plus, flying is stupid, so that's out. Oh, and he needs to fight a giant spider, because spiders are the most dangerous predators in the insect kingdom."
The Sherlock Holmes of the books would beat the starch out of the Sherlock Holmes of the old movies. Smirkingly.




I am really enjoying the "Sherlock" series with Cumberbatch the stories are adapted for modern times but hold so many details of the stories.




I so agree!!


Way too much Rathbone infecting their performances. I still think the Ritchie movies come closest to capturing the look and feel of the Holmes of the books.

I could not disagree more! Brett, with his hair swept back, captures much of the appearance of Paget's original drawings. Plus, Brett actually gets into a boxing match in the dramatization of The Priory School. The staging is simple and the fight rather subdued (a few jabs are traded back and forth before Holmes' superior skill wins out), but he comes out of it with a couple of nice cuts and bruises. We must also remember that much of the action in Doyle's work is told in retrospect. We see Holmes after several days of living on the street and surviving attempts on his life in The Final Problem, rather than the attempts themselves.
As to Waston, I agree the first Watson (David Burke) did not do Watson justice. He was okay, but not great. Edward Hardwick, though, was fantastic as the older, wiser Watson, who was still amazed by Holmes' skill, but was ready to point out his foibles just as frequently (and crack wise at his friend's expense). He lacks some of the physicality of Watson from the book, but the hard-nosed military man surfaces many times. For example, in The Dancing Men he puts his pistol to the culprit's temple with a calm reserve that shouts, "I will not hesitate to end you." He may not be as rough and tumble as the cinema Watson, but he was not lightweight.



I'm with you Jamie

I don't think that the movies are faithful to the books, as far as I could understand... so I refuse to see them x)

They are the most faithful adaptations to date. Anyone who tells you differently has never read the books.


I'm still going to compare books and movies, of course, but you dropped the wisdom up in here.

YES, if you love Sherlock Holmes, please, do yourself a very solid favor and watch SHERLOCK. Start with "A Study In Pink" and see what you think!



I really like Sherlock. Benedict Cumberbatch has replaced Jeremy Brett as my favourite film Holmes. I was disappointed at the last two films in the series, but the first four are solid.

Jeremy Brett.. best Holmes ever..

I loved the movie! Robert Downey Jr. is Sherlock! He did an amazing job portraying that character, and so did Jude Law with Watson. I can't choose which one I like the most, because I must say that I love Doyle's writing, I just love how he writes and I loved how Downey brought to life Holmes. It's hard to choose, since one is a movie and another thing is a classic book :S
And talking about the BBC adaptation and the movie, it's hard to say too, because they are based on different time periods, and Robert did an amazing job portraying what Sherlock was and Cumberbatch did an amazing job portraying what will Holmes will be today.
And talking about the BBC adaptation and the movie, it's hard to say too, because they are based on different time periods, and Robert did an amazing job portraying what Sherlock was and Cumberbatch did an amazing job portraying what will Holmes will be today.

I like the BBC show, too, but the Downey films definitely do feel like Holmes' character. Has no one actually read the stories?
Also, I found this comparison: http://oldeship.blogspot.com/2010/06/...

very true.. I am nt sure but how downey differs from Holmes of the books, who is so clean and methodical..he has such nice vintage aura around him, Father of a whole genre..
i shall check out BBC's series though.. havent seen that

I think that Downey is the best Sherock Holmes.

Couldn't agree more.
I think they made the Robert Downey Holmes be more of an action figure than the books portrayed him, though he did have a few actions scenes that I remember from the books very well. But movies do that to sell the movie and that's what it takes to attract a big audience. The difference was probably the emphasis. The books emphasized his thinking, while the movie emphasized his ability. I absolutely love the modern day Sherlock! It has become my favorite series. I wish they would make more than three per season!
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