Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (DVD REVIEW)
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows
DVD Review
by Kam Williams
Sherlock Matches Wits with Nemesis in Scintillating Sequel
Once again, Guy Ritchie has served
up a bombastic interpretation of Sherlock Holmes which might have Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle spinning in his grave. That disclaimer notwithstanding, anyone
open-minded enough to forgive the blasphemous action sequences is in for a
cinematic treat every bit as cerebral as it is visually captivating.
Robert
Downey, Jr. and Jude Law
reprise their roles as Holmes and Dr. Watson, respectively while Jared Harris
has joined the cast to play the pair’s diabolical archenemy, the inscrutable Professor James Moriarty.
At the point of departure, we find
Holmes in the midst of throwing a bawdy bachelor party for his loyal sidekick
who is set to marry a lovely lass named Mary (Kelly Reilly) the very next
morning. However, after the wedding, the newlyweds’ travel plans go immediately
awry courtesy of a comedy of errors in which the bride is unceremoniously
tossed off a train leaving her hubby and Sherlock to share the honeymoon suite
aboard the Trans Europe Express.
It’s just as well, anyway, given the
fact that the perspicacious Holmes has been the only detective able to connect
the dots among a series of recent slayings, including the murders of an Indian
cotton tycoon, a Chinese opium trader and an American Steel magnate, as well as
some suspicious bombings in Strasbourg and Vienna. The super sleuth
has figured out not only that it must be the work of Moriarty but that the
maniacal madman might be trying to trigger an international incident.
So, a frenetically-paced,
cat-and-mouse caper unfolds in which the protagonists chase the
endlessly-clever professor from France
to Germany to Switzerland.
Along the way, they are assisted in this endeavor by Holmes’ hulking brother
(Stephen Fry) and a gypsy fortune teller (Noomi Rapace) with the proverbial
heart of gold.
Brace yourself for the sort of
stylized, high-impact fare for which director Ritchie is best known. Besides
the bravado and over-the-top derring-do, the adventure does also allow for
intellectual interludes during which Sherlock and his nemesis match wits in a
rather refined fashion.
Welcome to the 21st Century edition
of Sherlock Holmes, a well-rounded gent as likely to flex his brawn as his
brain!
Excellent (4 stars)
Rated PG-13 for drug use and intense violence.
In English and French with subtitles.
Running time: 129
Minutes
Distributor: Warner Home
Entertainment Group
Blu-ray/DVD Combo Pack Extras: Maximum Movie Mode: Inside the Mind of
Sherlock Holmes – Hosted by Robert Downey, Jr. (TRT: 130 minutes); and a
digital copy of the film.
No comments:
Post a Comment