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The Adventure Of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother
[1975]

Starring: Gene Wilder, Madeline Kahn, Marty Feldman, Dom DeLuise
Director: Gene Wilder
Format: PAL
Released: 04 Sep 2006
RRP: £12.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

If you are a fan of Wilder and Feldmann you will love this! - By: farm boy, 28 Mar 2008
Previous reviews have perhaps given a better critical view of this film, but if you are a fan of Wilder & Feldmann you will enjoy this. Leo Mckern makes a fine villain who is both believable & insane, both important to the credibility. Too many of the jokes are simple such as chocolate on the face, but some are sublime such as the wonderful balllroom scene (I will not spoil the joke). For an English audience there is the added 'reassurance' of Roy Kinnear & other 'usual suspects'. The singing, dancing & fencing are unexpectedly good & the whole film becomes an enjoyable romp with some quite dramatic moments.
"Is this rotten or is it all terribly brave?" - By: Trevor Willsmer, 12 Mar 2007
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother isn't Mycroft but the `forgotten' third brother Sigerson (actuallly the assumed name Holmes used in The Adventure of the Empty House), & there's a lot to forget about this failed attempt to do for the Holmes family what Gene Wilder did for the Frohnkensteens. Without a collaborator on the screenplay & taking the directorial reins himself, as well as the starring role, there's far more unfettered self-indulgence here than wit. There's thankfully a little less pointless hysteria from Wilder than usual, although this is sadly more than compensated for by excessive yelping from Leo McKern & tedious showboating from Dom De Luise (now there's a surprise). Indeed, this may well be the only film in which chronic overactor Aubrey Morris gives the most restrained performance. There's also an excess of messy eating & childish humor to contend with, not to mention the unforgivable waste of Marty Feldman's unique talents in a dull sidekick role. There is one funny sequence in a balllroom & a couple of moments where the ideas are good enough to survive the sledgehammer execution, but when Albert Finney, in a one-shot cameo in the film's Night at the Operatic finale, turns to the camera to ask "Is this rotten or is it alll terribly brave?", it's not difficult to come up with an answer.

Fox's DVD offers a decent 1.85:1 widescreen transfer with the original trailer, but doesn't include Gene Wilder audio commentary from the Region 1 disc - admittedly no great loss since it's so sparing & uninformative & filled with dead air pauses of several minutes at a time that you'll wonder if you clicked the wrong button on your menu!
Verdi + Dom DeLuise = Hysterics - By: A. M. Glenville, 12 Dec 2006
If you have never seen or heard of this film & you like clever & funny movies -this is it. From the first scenes with the "real" Sherlock slipping into drag, through Madeline Kahn as a superb Victorian Music Halll artiste, & finallly The Masked Balll, as you have never seen it, with Luciano DeLuise (watch the movie & you'll see what I mean) this is a five star comedy.

Gene Wilder's best! - By: Ms. L. Pollock, 22 Aug 2006
This is the best & most funniest film in alll movie history. There is no better song & dance than the 'Kangaroo Hop'. In fact, I perform it every day whilst on my way to the merry old opera house.