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Full Cast and Crew. Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson solve the mysteries of copper beeches, a Greek interpreter, the Norwood builder, a resident patient, the red-headed league, and one final problem.

Wait, Is Mary Poppins a Witch? My Favourite TV Shows. My Favorite TV Shows. TV Shows not seen yet. TV shows I want to watch. How Much Have You Seen? How many episodes of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes have you seen? Share this Rating Title: The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes — 8. Use the HTML below. You must be a registered user to use the IMDb rating plugin. Favorite oft-adapted male literary character from the 19th century Face-Off: Learn more More Like This. Female characters are often drawn as bombshells. A recurring location in the stories is the Alibi Bar , a bar favoured by various shady characters.

In many stories, Knatterton has found out the real situation and been able to complete his deductions when visiting the Alibi Bar , where he sometimes finds a wealthy family's teenage daughter and the man who stole her jewelry wrapped up in each other's arms. Nick Knatterton's adventures were translated into many languages, and a television cartoon series was produced in by the creator's own studio.

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All 15 episodes of the show are available on DVD [3] not only in Germany but also dubbed in Finland where it earned a Gold Record in three months. Characters merely squeak when they are shown talking, and the narrator then explains what was said. Knatterton himself often voices out the conclusions of his deductions by saying " Conclusion " German: From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. The goal was to show the home of the master detective not only from the inside in studio sets, but also from the outside, so that the closer environment of the fictional Baker Street could be used as a scenery.

Production designer Michael Grimes achieved the impossible and built a life-size set of Baker Street on the Granada studio lot in Manchester with a level of detail that had never been attempted before and certainly surpassed the earlier Lorindy productions, who even had borrowed footage from Billy Wilder's Private Life of Sherlock Holmes.

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The interior of b Baker Street was, of course, not constructed on the outdoor set, which consisted only of house fronts, but in a converted warehouse on the studio lot, in which most of the other sets were located. Hudson's house looks surprisingly modern with bright and friendly rooms, quite different from the often dark and moody rooms full of antiquated furniture often visible in other Holmes adaptations. The producers had correctly realized that Sherlock Holmes does not live in the early victorian ages, but at the end of the quite modern 19th century.

The series was also not exclusively shot on the studio lot - there was ample room in the budget for location shooting because many of the stories did not only happen in London, but often out in the country. For some locations, impressive, but often gloomy old manors and castles were found, to which Holmes and Watson travel by coach and sometimes even by train.


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Although the train rides were filmed with a mock-up of a compartment on a lorry, some exterior shots of a historic steam train were created. Together with the often very beautiful, but also sometimes darkly menacing natural British countryside, a very convincing late victorian atmosphere was created. Holmes conoisseurs and critics alike were enthusiastic about the faithful adaptions of Arthur Conan Doyle's stories and could hardly await the broadcast of the next episodes, which were only shown after a pause of more than a year in Summer The overwhelmingly positive response made sure that The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes was not the last appearance of Jeremy Brett as the master detective and Granada produced a lot more episodes for ITV.

In The Return of Sherlock Holmes continued the series and altogether 36 episodes and five feature-length movies were made between and - a sizeable part of Arthur Conan Doyle's works. In Germany, the thirteen episodes of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes were first shown together with half of The Return of Sherlock Holmes at the end of in some of the local "third" public television channels.

The series had actually premiered in East Germany shortly before, where also the only German version was made. The translation was very careful and accurate, but Jeremy Brett was dubbed by two different actors with Franz Viemann appearing as his voice in the first seven episodes and Arno Wyzniewski in the remaining six.

David Burke was, however, dubbed by Werner Ehrlicher in the whole series. After only a handful of reruns at the beginning of the s, the series had vanished altogether from the German television screens and many of the later episodes were never broadcast.

Thirty years after their broadcast premiere, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes are still the remarkable beginning of one of the most successful literature adaptations in English television history. Over the course of t ten years, Granada and ITV brought the majority of Arthur Conan Dolye's short stories and novels to life in a way the author would probably have very much approved of.

Although Granada's Sherlock Holmes has been and still is a constant fixture on British tv screens thanks to the reruns on ITV, the series has been absent from German television for more than twenty years. Koch Media was able to license the restored video masters from Granada and, of course, also the original English soundtrack in addition to the German dubs. There were no disc-based extras, but something even better: Although only a German translation of the book was published, it was especially welcome because A Study in Celluloid had become incredibly rare and even today is still only available for high collector's prices.

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The book was part of the DVD packaging, which came as a book-pack, containing the pages between two digipack trays in a sturdy hardback cover. The cover design was, unfortunately, not as elegant as on Polyband's previous releases of the five feature-length movies - the standard fonts and the layout looked somewhat disappointing, especially considering the otherwise very high-class packaging. The exterior of this DVD set should, however, not deter from a purchase, because with this release, over eleven hours of a classic television series in the very best quality are offered together with a fantastic printed supplement.

One year after the first thirteen episodes Koch Media had also released the eleven episodes of The Return of Sherlock Holmes in Germany, but nobody had seriously thought that the studio would also do the same with the last twelve episodes from The Memoirs But after the first two boxsets had sold very well, Koch Media had gone the extra mile and not only released the last missing episodes, but chose to dub them as well for a parallel German television airing.

The whole series is also available as an inexpensive boxset and apparently Koch Media is going to release The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes in March on Blu-Ray, but since the source material is not really fit for high definition, this release might not be worth an upgrade.

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (TV Series –) - IMDb

If no German soundtracks are required, the recent british re-release from ITV video is also a good alternative to the Koch Media DVDs, especially because it contains some previously unavailable extras. The 16mm material has its limits - earlier versions of the series often looked damaged, unsharp and faded, but in Granada had the original negatives carefully re-transfered and remastered. Koch Media fortunately had access to these masters, making the image quality of these DVDs very excellent.

The usual limits of 16mm film material are only noticable in small amounts, because the film sources had been thoroughly cleaned and there are no scratches or dust particles visible. More difficult to fix seems to have been the slightly shaky image, but this has been rectified as good as possible and is hardly noticeable. Sharpness is quite good for 16mm, but cannot really compete with 35mm productions, although many details are visible which were previously hidden by bad video transfers.

The first seven episodes are slightly digitally sharpened, while the last six look slightly softer, but also more natural. Film grain is distinctly visible in all episodes due to the 16mm sources and has not been filtered out, making these transfers look very film-like.

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle

The colours are reproduced very naturally and do not have the faded green-yellow tint of the previous incarnations of the series at all, although depending on the episode, they can be somewhat desaturated or otherwise creatively modified. The compression is not absolutely optimal, because the bitrate has been set at only about 4. Because only the first disc contains four episodes, the room on the other discs was not fully utilised.

Despite the limitations of the source material and some imperfections in the authoring, this thirty year old television series still looks absolutely outstanding on these DVDs thanks to Granada's successful remastering work. The German release of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes comes, of course, with both English and German soundtracks in quite well remastered versions.

As a television series from , only solid mono soundtracks are provided, which have thankfully not been bumped up to stereo or worse, although the quality is exceptionally good and has only few age-related limitations.