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List Price: $59.98Amazon.com's Price: $47.99 You Save: $11.99 (20%)Prices subject to change.
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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: Unrated
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0030306752297
Format: Box set, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC
Label: Mpi Home Video
Manufacturer: Mpi Home Video
Number Of Items: 5
Publisher: Mpi Home Video
Region Code: 1
Release Date: March 25, 2003
Running Time: 540 minutes
Sales Rank: 9621
Studio: Mpi Home Video
Theatrical Release Date: December 08, 1988
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Editorial Review:
Amazon.com: In addition to numerous one-hour episodes, Granada Television produced five feature-length Sherlock Holmes films starring Jeremy Brett, easily the best of all screen actors to play the sleuth, and Edward Hardwicke, a warm and capable Dr. Watson. The 1987 feature version of The Sign of Four, the second Holmes novel written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, is faithful to the original story except in one important detail: Dr. Watson does not get the girl. Otherwise, the familiar tale of the death of Bartholomew Sholto and the theft of the Agra treasure is all here, as is a snappy performance by Brett as Holmes doing some of the finest investigative work of his career.
A thrilling blend of detective yarn and Gothic horror, The Hound of the Baskervilles (1988) concerns the apparent return of an old curse upon the Baskerville family in the terrifying form of a gigantic killer hound. Fans of Hardwicke get an opportunity to see his Watson on a solo mission for part of this story, though Brett is never far from the narrative. The supporting cast is very good, and the beast itself, revealed in a famously terrifying finale, is indeed a spooky revelation.
In The Master Blackmailer (1991), Holmes takes on the reputed king of all blackmailers. Charles Augustus Milverton (Robert Hardy) has made a fortune extorting money from the famous and the blue-blooded, and he routinely ruins others' lives when not pleased. Unable to talk Milverton into turning over letters belonging to Lady Eva Brackenwell, Holmes decides to steal them, going undercover as a plumber and even romancing Milverton's housemaid, Agatha (Sophie Thompson), to gain better access in the house. The story builds to a surprisingly violent finale, but the real hook is Brett's performance as the disguised detective and the startling suggestion that Holmes's close contact with Agatha truly moved the bachelor sleuth.
A little overextended as a two-hour movie, The Eligible Bachelor (1992) was made late in the enterprise. It finds Holmes (the ailing Brett, playing an increasingly darker and more neurotic detective) and Watson called upon to help in a case involving the disappearance of Henrietta Doran (Paris Jefferson). Fiancée of the noble Lord Robert St. Simon (Simon Williams), Doran was last seen with a former lover of St. Simon's, Flora Millar (Joanna McCallum). The unimaginative Scotland Yard instantly arrests Millar on suspicion of foul play, but it is Holmes who has to find the missing woman.
The Last Vampyre (1992) was perhaps the most ill-advised of the series. Entirely contrary to the tone and spirit of Doyle's short story "The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire"--which finds Holmes victoriously pitting his well-grounded deductive powers against irrational fears of a rise in bloodsucking--it's something of an embarrassment to the largely wonderful legacy of Granada's earlier efforts. (For the record, most of the creative executives who had worked on the beloved series in the 1980s had been replaced by the time this film was made.) In this version, Holmes does battle with a Dracula-like fellow who may or may not be the real McCoy. There is a great deal of padding to fill out the story, and it is mostly silly, but the ailing Brett gives an ever-fascinating performance, which deviates from Doyle's vision of the detective toward something darker and more personal. --Tom Keogh
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
This is the third set of Sherlock Holmes movies starring Jeremy Brett as Sherlock Holmes that we have purchased. Jeremy Brett gives such a convincing performance that you wish you were there right along his side helping him solve his cases.
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If it's a Jeremy Brett performance of Sherlock Holmes -- just buy it. Brett can really act, that is, communicate emotion, not just pose while music swells or the dialogue tells you what he's feeling.Brett can show you several emotions in one or two seconds -- no dialogue needed. He's brilliant, and some of these later movies, when he knew he was dying, have a poignancy to the performance that is very special. He knew he WAS Holmes to many watchers, and that this was his legacy and his immortality. ... Read More
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"The Sherlock Holmes Feature Film Collection" contains five Sherlock Holmes tales produced at TV movie length. These Grenada television productions star Jeremy Brett as the Sherlock Holmes of his generation and Edward Hardwick as a most excellent Dr. Watson.
Two of the five entries are obvious picks for feature film treatment: "The Hound of the Baskervilles" and "The Sign of Four." Each was originally published as a short novel; the stories readily fit a movie format. "The Hound of ... Read More
Rating: -
I am a big fan of Granada television's splendid Sherlock Holmes films starring Jeremy Brett, and I heartily recommend any of the DVD collections (the Adventures, Return, Casebook, or Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes) that contain hourlong episodes based closely on Conan Doyle's short stories. This DVD collection of the five longer films (each is almost two hours) that were made is necessarily a mixed bag, however, because it contains: one of the best episodes ever made ("The Sign of Four" solidly based on ... Read More
Rating: -
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
Brilliant work., October 30, 2007
Without any doubt, Jeremy Brett brilliantly captured the essence of Sherlock Holmes. The arrogance, the sly humor, the over-the-top outlandish mannersims and reactions (that enigmatic quick smile) were perfect. I love Basil Rathbone's Holmes, especially since many portraits favor him; however, Brett's performances are par excellence...there has been none better and I would ... Read More
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