'Sherlock Holmes' has everything but the villain - pressofAtlanticCity.com: Movies

default avatar
Welcome to the site! Login or Signup below.
|
||
Logout|My Dashboard
default avatar
Welcome to the site! Login or Signup below.
|
||
Logout|My Dashboard
At The Shore logo At The Shore Online Home

'Sherlock Holmes' has everything but the villain

Print
Font Size:
Default font size
Larger font size

Posted: Thursday, December 15, 2011 8:00 am | Updated: 10:28 am, Thu Dec 15, 2011.

For much of the cinema's history, movies have had the good sense to keep Sherlock Holmes' nemesis, Professor Moriarty, off camera - an unseen villain made more menacing by his absence.

Guy Ritchie's "Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows" puts the infamous Professor M. face to face with Holmes. They parry, trade threats and play chess. But with the evil genius played by the unimposing Jared Harris ("Mad Men," "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button"), you can't help but wonder why Robert Downey Jr. doesn't just dope-slap this shrimp and "crack on."

It's not a fatal case of miscasting. "Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows" is still a romp, albeit an overlong one. But Hitchcock's maxim - "Good villains make good thrillers" - holds true. But Ritchie burned through his best bad guy - the cunning, cutlery-faced Mark Strong - in his first Holmes film.

Downey is more Chaplinesque, more whimsical and more English in this sequel, a two-fisted howitzer-barreled blast that manages to be lighter, funnier and yet more violent than the first Downey-Ritchie Holmes film. Check out the face Downey pulls when Holmes realizes that one leg of his cross-Europe pursuit of Moriarty will involve riding on horseback.

"They are dangerous at both ends, and crafty in the middle," he quips, though he's already landed his laugh with the look on his face.

Holmes is about to lose Watson (Jude Law), his perfect foil and bantering partner, to matrimony. But botching the stag party and almost ruining the wedding itself won't be enough of a sendoff. It is "our last adventure, Watson. I intend to make the most of it."

That entails derailing the honeymoon.

Ritchie takes his Sam Peckinpah slow-motion violence fetish to artful new extremes and treats us to more scenes in which Holmes' peerless powers of concentration and perception give him an almost supernatural ability to play through the variables in a coming fight in his mind, before actually martial-arts-ing his way past legions of evil henchman.

Downey and Law click like a polished comedy team, with Law more than holding his own with Downey's hilarious excesses. Downey makes us believe that this "manic" (Watson prefers "psychotic") detective is living on "a diet of coffee, tobacco and coca leaves." It's a role informed by the actor's street cred.

Noomi Rapace ably leaves her "Dragon Tattoo" behind as a gypsy in search of her anarchist brother, who is mixed up in Moriarty's plans. And Stephen Fry vamps it up as Holmes' starchy Oscar Wilde-side brother.

If only the recycled Bond-film gadgets and Bond-film plot line didn't weigh it down. If only they'd spent the cash on a bad guy with stature, instead of taking that phrase, "the banality of evil," so literally. Playing this "Game" might have been even more fun.

 

Videos

Interview with Tracy Morgan ahead of his Atlantic City Appearance

...