SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE SECRET WEAPON(Universal / US / 1942)
The 2nd modern-day Holmes film at Universal was the first directed by Roy William Neill, who went on to do 11 in a row! Dennis Hoey also makes his debut as Inspector Lestrade in here. Both he & Nigel Bruce's Watson are played more serious here than in later installments, though early-on, there seems to be some good-natured friendly kidding between them. Basil Rathbone, as always, is mesmerizing to watch!
Some have complained about "contrived" plot points, and it must be said the biggest part of the story involves a supposedly-brilliant inventor foolishly refusing to allow the British Government or even Scotland Yard knowledge or access to his methods of manufacturing his new secret bombsite mechanism... which makes him far too easy a target for Professor Moriarty, who's now working for Nazi spies!
One of my favorite parts of the film is the scene where Holmes & Watson decipher the code, as for once, you really get the feeling that Watson is on the ball and pretty sharp. I don't mind a bit of character humor, but I wish Nigel Bruce had been allowed to play Watson like this more often.
Soon after, the pair turn up at what proves to be the scene of the first of 3 consecutive murders, and Lestrade also proves to have his wits about him.
The last scene I really enjoyed, was when Holmes allowed himself to be taken prisoner by Moriarty, and deliberately taunts him, then gives him a suggestion for a "more inventive" way of committing murder-- slowly draining the blood from the victim. This is actually a ploy to allow Lestrade, Watson & the police to track down Moriarty's hideout, so that the kidnapped inventor Dr. Tobel can be rescued. Lionel Atwill, who seemed too crude up to this point, really shines during this climax. I understand Fox wanted him to play Moriarty in "
ADVENTURES" in 1939, but somehow he was unavailable, leading them to get George Zucco, who proved FAR better, instead.
Inspirations for stories fascinate me. It's clear the code in this story came straight from "
The Dancing Men", but I also see details from "
The Sign Of Four" (the man with the wooden leg, and the temporary false trail followed by the cops). However, Moriarty having a "stronghold", which features both a large sliding metal door and a deep shaft to dump bodies down, strike me as being borrowed from the final Arthur Wontner film,
SILVER BLAZE / MURDER AT THE BASKERVILLES (1937, but released in America in 1941!). It's amazing it took me this long to connect that, but it figures, since the climax of Fox's "
ADVENTURES" seems a blatent variation on the climax of Wontner's
THE TRIUMPH OF SHERLOCK HOLMES (1935).
But influence runs both ways. The opening scene, where an old man comes into a shop to sell rare old books, AND, the scene where it's discovered the code can be read when reversed (as in a mirror), turned up almost verbatim in the 1977 Euro film
THE FABULOUS JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH. Neither scene is in Verne's novel, which suggests whoever wrote that film was a fan of this one! If anyone can point out an earlier source for these scenes, I'd be happy to learn about it.