Film Analysis Of Sherlock Holmes 'Behind The Shadows'

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Behind the Shadows

Sherlock Holmes was a huge global hit back in 2009, making the studio Warner Bros million of dollars, reinventing Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s deductive detective as a charming, wise cracking action hero. It’s no surprise that the Warner Bros studio has decided to create a sequel for franchise, with Guy Ritchie remaining on directing duties, and arch nemesis Professor Moriarty taking center stage as the film’s villain. The film starts out in London in 1891, Sherlock goes on a wild goose chase with his arch nemesis Professor James Moriarty (Jared Harris). Holmes’ investigation into Moriarty’s plot becomes dangerous as it leads him and Watson out of London to France, Germany and finally Switzerland. As Sherlock is close to …show more content…

According to many film critics the casting of Sherlock Holmes A Game of Shadows, is the most successful move made by this franchise, and indeed Robert Downey Jr in particular creates an …show more content…

The pacing and dialogue are often too fast and the plot is jumbled and ultimately a bit silly, requiring long explanations that can be hard to follow. If the audience can’t follow on what’s going on with the film, they’ll lose interest. The plot is to hard to piece together, if the audience blinks they will miss the clues. One example of this is all the location changes that goes through the film, the audience never gets a clear notification to where our main characters are til they are already there. It’s hard to follow our heros’ role, everything seemed fast paced. Here’s a second example, Holmes ponders, “What does the greatest criminal mastermind want with a simple fortune teller? It’s her brother, I tell you!” This is how the audience finds out that the fortune teller character, Madam Simza, has a brother. Where the clues that lead up to this? It just seemed like everything just shifted so fast that I missed the clues. Some of the most interesting scenes are the quiet ones where the brilliant minds and begrudging admiration of Holmes and Moriarty face off. But Ritchie, seems more interested in using them merely as springboards for fights, chases, and

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