Sherlock Holmes' Fatal Hour
84 min. / B&W / 1.33:1 / DTS HD-MA 2.0 MONO / SDH
Film Masters Blu-ray $21.99
Available from Movie Zyng
When Film Masters gave us a double-feature of Arthur Wontner/Ian Fleming (not THAT Ian Fleming) British films of the 1930s, I was so pleased that I begged for more, and not wishing to see me grovel, Film Masters here presents the first film in the series, under its American title (it was more accurately known as The Sleeping Cardinal in England). While we’re Rathbone-Bruce devotees (and Doyle fanatics) in this house, this British films, while creaky, presents our second favorite team of Holmes & Watson.
A young diplomat enjoys gambling and doesn’t enjoy losing, and when he’s caught cheating a mysterious voice behind a portrait of a Sleeping Cardinal blackmails him into moving some counterfeit bills to the continent via his (non-Customs searchable) diplomatic pouch. The diplomat’s sister is concerned for her brother, calls in old family friend Dr. Watson, who tags you-know-who into looking into the matter, and you know how Holmes is: no matter the circumstance, he’s convinced – despite the reluctance of the rather dense Inspector Lestrade – that the Napoleon of Crime, the nefarious Moriarty, is the mastermind behind the sinister scheme.
A fun kickoff to the series, loosely inspired by two Holmes stories, The Empty House and The Final Problem. The chemistry between Wontner and Fleming is wonderful, and the latter’s Watson has just that right mix of faithful confidence in his own abilities and deductive incompetence to keep things amusing in between the killings. And such killings! The film opens with the murder of a night watchman, completely filmed in shadows and silhouette, that’s a real grabber.
Hey, it was 1931, and nobody is going to claim that this is anything other than a typical unfluid mystery of the early sound era, with clunky camerawork and a rather wooden supporting cast, including Jane Welsh as the sister, Norman McKinnel as Moriarty, Minnie Raynor as Mrs. Hudson, and Philip Hewland as Lestrade.
As a late, late show for insomniacs looking for an interesting old mystery, though it’s a pip, and Film Masters has done its usual yeoman’s job of cleaning up the picture and sound of a very old film far removed from its original materials. We enjoyed it.
Review of the earlier Holmes Blu-ray can be read HERE.