Well, as of tonight, my current
SHERLOCK HOLMES marathon has finally reached what I would call "The Modern Era"-- namely,
1959!
THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES(Hammer Films / United Artists / 1959)
My first exposure to Holmes was "
THE HOUSE OF FEAR" with Basil Rathbone. But it turned out (I didn't realize this for some years), Rathbone's "
HOUND" was yanked from circulation for about 20 years... because of THIS movie. The Hammer film, run on the very same Saturday that ABC ran their unsold pilot with Stewart Granger, was my 1st exposure to the story, when Peter Cushing became only the 2nd actor I'd ever seen playing the part.
Ever since the early 80s, I've been putting up with a horrible VHS copy I recorded off the local UHF station channel 17, with a faded print, BAD antenna signal, choppy editing at the commercial breaks, and I think, part of one scene outright missing. It was still one of my favorites for a long time... at least, until I started really seeing so many other versions of the story, just about all of them at least somewhat more faithful to the story, and 3 of them VERY faithful (although the most popular of those is one I find almost-unwatchable for a variety of reasons). And lately, some of the really old, rare foreign versions, some recently rediscovered & restored, have become HUGE favorites. So it began to really bug me whan I kept seeing so many people INSISTING that the 1959 was the "best" version of
HOUND, or even, the "best" Holmes film ever made. NOT EVEN CLOSE!!! Even so, I've been looking forward to getting a "decent" version for quite a while, and I'm thrilled to finally have one... even if I wound up OVER-PAYING because the Blu-Ray was a 3000-copy limited edition from a company that, I just found out minutes ago, went out of business 2 YEARS ago.
Imagine-- tonight was the first time I EVER saw this film in WIDESCREEN!!! And, a crystal-clear UNCUT copy of it, too! On that score alone, this blows Warner Archive's "
HORROR OF DRACULA" disc completely out of the water. It really struck me, watching this, that the stunning, gorgeous color scheme in most of this reminds me of a classic DISNEY film from the same period. It looks THAT DAMNED GOOD.
There remains the almost amusing irony that while Hammer's "
HOUND" may be one of the MOST-authentic classic adaptations they ever did (their version of "
Carmilla" is far more so), it is currently to my eyes about the 2nd-LEAST-authentic version I've seen (that outragious honor goes to the
1914, an absolutely FUN film that has to be seen to be believed)
I'd say the first half of the film does a heck of a job trying to COMPRESS a really complicated mystery story into a very short space of time, but the last act goes COMPLETELY off the rails, totally SCREWING with the original story in so many ways it's probably best not trying to list them all. Essentially, Hammer was far more interested doing a "Hammer" film, than they were, a "Holmes" film.
This goes even to Peter Cushing, who in recent times I discovered played a MUCH nicer, more authentic Holmes in the
1968 BBC TV series (the one where the Beeb was monstrously-stupid enough to WIPE 2/3rds of the episodes from existence-- those bastards!). And yes, I do find it amusing that Cushng did the "
HOUND" a 2nd time, for that TV series, and I've come to prefer that over this one.
For interesting comparison, see the
1929 and
1937 German versions, which both seem to have FAR more in common with this film than the "classic" Fox version from
1939, which despite its production values somehow managed to leave out AT LEAST HALF of the book (as compare to this one, which left out about two-thirds of the book).
One bit I could not help note was that scene with the tarantula. It seems to have stepped right out of Ian Fleming's "
Dr. No", a story he wrote in part to give his cousin Christopher Lee a starring role as the Oriental VILLAIN. But given that Lee's real-life wartime exploits were one of the things that actually inspired the character of James Bond, I can't help but see this scene as being Lee DOING Bond, 3 years before EON Productions did, starting with "
DR. NO". In fact, I don't think Ive ever seen Lee in any role where he reminded me SO MUCH of Fleming's version of Bond, personality-wise. The bit about smashing the spider on the floor was very CLOSE to the scene where Sean Connery did the same thing with a tarantula in the
1962 movie, down to the number of times the critter was hit. (It was a giant centipede in Fleming's book.)
With this in mind, I couldn't help but picture how different things might have gone, if Lee had been cast as Bond instead of Connery (they both played baddies in their time). And watching this film, I could suddenly also easily imagine Andre Morell as "M"... and Peter Cushing as "Q". Had things really gone different, and the film series had been able to start with the 1st novel... Peter Lorre, who was STILL around at this time, would have been perfect as the 1st story's main villain, "Le Chiffre", who he played to such perfection in the
1954 TV adaptation of "
CASINO ROYALE".
With my mind on a roll like this, I began to wonder about the other characters. Clearly, Ed Bishop would have been a perfect Felix Leiter (or, David Hedison if they could have gotten him-- heh). I'd have gone with Belgian actor Eugene Deckers as French agent Rene Mathis. And I think... Eunice Gayson as Vesper Lynd. (Hey, why not?)
I've got another Terence Fisher film en route as I type this. If I'm lucky, I'll be able to watch that one NEXT Monday. 🙂