While it pales in
comparison to the same year’s big-screen Sherlock Holmes adventure The Seven Per-Cent Solution, this
entertaining telefilm boasts a colorful cast, a fine script, and more-than-adequate
production values. The picture also represents Roger Moore’s first and only
attempt at playing Arthur Conan Doyle’s iconic detective, and he’s a good fit.
Not only does Moore’s velvety voice make long scenes of Sherlock explaining
things an auditory pleasure, but the snobbishness inherent to Moore’s screen
persona meshes nicely with the aloof quality of the Holmes character. There
have been so many wonderful interpretations of this particular investigator
that offering superlatives is imprudent, so it will suffice to say that Holmes
and Moore do each other justice.
Written as a screen original by veteran TV
scribe Alvin Sapinsley, directed by the reliable Boris Segal, and set to jaunty
music by Richard Rodney Bennett, Sherlock
Holmes in New York opens in London, with Holmes spoiling the latest scheme
of his nemesis, Professor Moriarty (John Huston), who vows revenge before
escaping. Soon afterward, Holmes receives word that his on-again/off-again
lover, actress Irene Adler (Charlotte Rampling), is in peril. Thus Holmes and
his trusty biographer/sidekick, Dr. Watson (Patrick Macnee), travel to New
York, where Irene is performing. Holmes learns that Irene’s son—whose father
may or may not be Holmes himself—has been kidnapped, and that Moriarty is
responsible. The catch? Moriarty has stolen all the gold from an international
exchange, and Holmes is warned that if he helps police recover the stolen loot,
Adler’s son will suffer the consequences. Dum-dum-dum!
Sapinsley’s script hits
nearly all the required notes well. The dialogue is elevated, the criminal
scheme is outrageous, and the interplay between Adler and Holmes is deep,
encoded, and sexy. (Rampling looks especially beautiful here, with her
signature iciness suiting the role of a woman capable of intriguing the brilliant
Holmes.) Despite wearing a goofy perm and sideburns, Moore cruises through his
performance with great flair, and Macnee employs a gruff vocal style instead of
his usual sing-song tones, which makes his Watson a fine complement to Moore’s
suave Holmes. If there’s a weak link in the cast, which also includes the great
David Huddleston as an NYPD detective, it’s Huston, who delivers an
over-the-top interpretation of Moriarty; that said, Huston appears in just a
few scenes, and he raises the energy level whenever he appears.
Sherlock Holmes in New York: GROOVY
I remember this! Huston was overmuch but fun, and the case was solved in part by Sherlock's usual exacting attention to physical detail. I have s soft spot for this because it claims that he's a William, his full name being William Sherlock Scott Holmes -- which, interestingly enough, is the exact same full name asserted by Benedict Cumberbatch in the BBC series Sherlock.
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