Mr Holmes, they were the footprints of a gigantic hound!
When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth?
Uttered in the original story, in the 1988 version and now again in 2012
Holmes (Jeremy Brett) comforting the rescued Miss Stapleton (found on stairwell beneath great house, 1988 The Hound of Baskerville by Hawkesworth)
Holmes (Benedict Cumberbatch) questioning animal experimenter Dr Stapleton (top secret laboratory, military compound, 2012 Hounds of Baskerville by Gatiss)
Dear friends and readers,
How the new Sherlock is ensemble camp art. The 2012 Hounds of the Baskervilles is also different content: the rape gone; we are in a world of top secret military compounds, laboratory experiments (on animals) and ruined landscapes.
I must retract what I said in my previous blog on The Latest Sherlock: while it’s true that in A Study in Pink (the 1st episode of last season), Mark Gatiss and Stephen Moffat wrote a script which really did follow the plot-design of at least the opening and middle phases of Conan Doyle’s A Study in Scarlett, so that the two and Jeremy Brett’s films in general move along in tandem and may be paralleled, when we come to the new, this year’s Hounds of the Baskerville and compare it with Conan Doyle’s The Hound of the Baskervilles and Jeremy Brett’s 1988 The Hound of the Baskerville, the new Sherlock departs so radically from the central buried or back story that the whole whole plot-design is changed and we have new content.
The film is not even an analogous adaptation. It appropriates (to use the fashionable term) the iconic character of Sherlock and his partner Watson, our memory of the general terrifying encounter of a ferocious huge glowing (phosphorescent) dog with a nervous fleeing victim in a vast wooded landscape round an ancient rich house and makes a new story for our time, and a few of the most memorable phrases to new purpose. In the comments to The Latest Sherlock , someone linked in a blog where a writer was (justifiably enough) angry at the erasure of strong women in the new series, and went on to talk about the ambiguous or fluid sexuality of the characters in a number of new mystery series, including this one.
The story of the abuse of woman is replaced. Conan Doyle’s original Hound had at its core, the mysterious tale of a cruel ruthless abuse of a young woman imprisoned in a room to be raped, who then flees the aristocratic rakish males who would abuse her again, only to find herself torn to bits by a supernatural hound. This core is paralleled by the front present day story of the amoral Baskervilles, and in the 1988 Brett version by John Hawkesworth the deceptions practiced on a modern day Miss Stapleton (Fiona Gillies). I wouldn’t call the Brett version feminist, but rather sympathetic to both its female and male vulnerable servant characters.
Rather than this, at the center of the Cumerbatch Sherlock is a military compound inside which is a vast laboratory in which top secret experiments are going on. When Sherlock and Watson penetrate their way in, they discover a very different Dr Stapleton (Amelia Bullmore). She experiments on rabbits, and we see all around her other frail and helpless animals (mostly small monkeys) in barred cages, attached to wires. The substitute is as relevant to our time as rape (especially since if we are telling the truth, the rape is kept marginal in both previous versions I’ve mentioned here): I felt distressed to see these animals and remembered Frederick Wiseman’s Primates and all that he and Jane Goodall and Sy Montgomery have taught me about the frighteningly impersonal cold cruelties wrecked on helpless animals in labs today. What is a more important threat to all of us today? Henry Knight (Russell Toyvey), the young man who is the victim of the hound in the back or buried story in the past may be paralleled to these small creatures. In this version we eventually learn that there was no hound, it was a psychological projection, helped along by what seems to be a fog machine, foisted on everyone, including Holmes and Watson.
I won’t go into the twists and turns of any of the three stories, nor compare the 1988 Sherlock with this. Why not? well, the Jeremy Brett series as produced by June Wyndham-Davies is gothic realism, heavily dependent on virtuoso acting performances at length, especially Brett’s. This is not. It’s ensemble playing: it reminded me of the relationship of Rachel Weisz in Whistleblower to Helen Mirren’s Prime Suspect. Whistleblower is also ensemble art, Mirren’s detective shows focus on her, she carries them. In addition, in this new Sherlock what happens happens centrally to Sherlock and John. They are not watchers on the side, coming in; they see the hound, they suffer madness; the core or back story moves alongside them.
So to turn to this new concoction, suffice to say that we are taken through a rigmarole which in the new version tests the friendship of Sherlock (while Brett was called Holmes by Watson in this series Cumberbatch is addressed as Sherlock by John Watson) and John (not called Watson by Sherlock but address as John). Everyone on a first name basis just about immediately in 2012. At one point Sherlock fools John by luring him to go into the laboratory and watching John’s distress and confusion and misery as he stumbles about confusedly and in increasing fear.
John lost and wandering (still partly lame), POV Sherlock from another side of a glass
An interesting side effect of this is we are (I think) supposed to feel alienated from Sherlock; he is behaving like Dr Stapleton (who may well have petted her rabbit and like the people in Wiseman’s film actually talk soothingly to the animals they are torturing). They really do quarrel over this.
Sherlock: John I don’t have friends. I have one.
[This softens John who is at heart as needy.]
I’m not making up or inserting into the story this animal rights matter. Among the deceits at the cosy inn is an attempt to cover up the high amounts of animal meat by ostentatiously offering vegetarian dishes. The poor rabbit is given the name bluebell, and Henry Knight often looks like some frantic animal caught in the headlights of an on-coming car.
The blogger who complained angrily about a lack of strong women should really not have much of a quarrel here. To me the superficiality of these demands for strength, no matter how used, is exposed in this episode. We have a second woman, Dr Mortimer (Sasha Behar), Henry’s psychologist who John Watson flirts with to get information out of her:
A Study in Pink opened with a hard-nosed woman psychologist (black) who similarly was there to make the man in front of her fit in, cope without disturbing others, and would have been more than willing to manipulate him, withhold information.
In a sense this ought to be a disturbing story. That it’s not is the result of another quality to this new Sherlock I want to bring up this time: it’s camp in Susan Sontag’s formulation: there’s a constant parodic element, strong artifice and stylization which makes what we see a game. One might say this is part of its gay sensibility — for there is one. The film-makers allude to all sorts of Sherlock paraphernalia: Sherlock is asked where is his hat? he is not recognizable without it. (The deerstalker hat is not in Conan Doyle but was a feature in some of the early illustrations and of picked up for Basil Rathbone’s costume along with the Inverness cape.)
The fun is in the exaggeration: this Mrs Hudson has liaisons, but alas the men she goes with have other women; as Sherlock gets into a cab he tells John that Mrs Hudson has been unlucky with another male again. After the opening terror of the boy attacked by a terrifying dog, we move to the cosy flat in 221B Baker and find Sherlock half-hysterical because he wants his usual stimulus — the word opium is coyly avoided and instead cigarettes are instances, but we all know what “the seven per cent solution” he’s talking of is. John scolds Sherlock from his desk that Sherlock must control himself. The performance of Cumberbatch is high theatrical body gestures and facial expression, as he swirls in his chair. The film-makers imitate a modern trope of romance drama and gothic since the 1939 Wuthering Heights and become de rigeur in Pride and Prejudice: like Catherine and Heathcliff, like Elizabeth Bennett, Sherlock stands high on a neolithic looking rock mountain:
This camp element is toned down during the moments of cheer and camaraderie between John and Sherlock — as when John is drinking his coffee at the close of the story and Sherlock walks over to a nearby set of tourists in cars near the inn where they stayed. It may disappear when neurotic upset characters are on stage (Henry Knight) or Sherlock goes into one of his long rapid-paced monologues regaling us with the banal misery of the lives about them , as when he and John are in a restaurant and nearby sits an unemployed man and his over-dressed costumed, bejewelled mother. Here is a pair like us, the 99%. Martin Freeman is very good at conveying a comical surprise whenever he finds himself in luxurious rich places so typical of these costume dramas (in this series highly modern looking — lots of glass walls). Henry has to admit, yes, he’s rich and that’s why these rooms are so large and empty.
It’s provocative to camp the Sherlock matter up. When Sherlock and John question the lab people about possible near-by monsters, they are told the last ones they saw were Abbott and Costello out after some monster.
Is there some safety in nihilism? This is post-modern nostalgia and the reassurance such as it is — with a calm ending so we seem to come back to Square one where we began (221 B Baker, the cosy inn, the car park, the cup of coffee) — comes from the spectacle, the enactments we’ve seen before. It’s the joke of timeless survival and repetition. Also oddly this two hours had some beautiful visuals against the ruined landscape around the half-buried military looking temporary buildings.
It’s not the dog that is scary; it’s the people who create false visions with their scientific equipment. This is not the first time I’ve noticed modern movies to be anti-science, even ones which seem as pro-high tech use as this one.
Ellen
This seems to me a strong analysis. The Downey Sherlock is also camp, isn’t it? The men who created these new Sherlocks are, obviously, Sherlock fans, and I enjoy the stream of allusions and twists on traditional themes. I guess the heart, if it has one, in both cases lies in the exploration of new versions of the relationship between Holmes and Watson. And the other great pleasure is watching the actor who plays Sherlock, the man as data processor. We know so much more now about what someone like that experiences–the sensory overload, so to speak.
The creators of the 21st-c Sherlock series work on Dr. Who. I have never been a great fan but I was led to watch a couple years’ worth of the recent “reboot.” Again, it’s the relationship between a brilliant “alien” and an adventurous human (Rose, in the versions I watched). But I guess Dr. Who is about as camp as you can get. There is rarely an invitation, no matter how fine the CGI, to suspend disbelief for more than a few minutes.
You are right about the animal experimentation situation, too. The theme is well explored in that one sees Holmes using Watson as a lab rat and the villain using Henry Knight that way, too. But the exploration is thematic, not moral: Dr, Stapleton is not bad, the villain is bad. The question posed is whether Sherlock himself is good or bad–capable of friendship or merely manipulative.
Ellen,
I found your discussion in the blog on the new Sherlock quite fascinating and on the mark–but for comparison, I was thinking of the 1939 movie version with Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce–when I called it a fine old classic. It was the first casting of Rathbone and Bruce as Sherlock and Watson.
I am not familiar with the 1988 movie version. There is also, apparently, a 1959 version.
The 1939 verion made a strong impression on the teenager I was when I first
saw it–suspenseful and scarey.
Linda
Dear Linda and all,
I can cite a book which has an essay on Sherlock Holmes films by Tamara Wagner which appears to be about the 1939 “faithful’ or transposition type film and compares the Rathbone series through analysis of a couple of the films with the very modern kind of free adaptation, parody and the Downey films (which turn Sherlock into a James Bond action-adventure sexed up hero): Tamara Wagner, “Tranposing Sherlock Holmes Across Time, Space, and Genre” in Victorian Literature and Film Adaptation, edd. ABBloom and MSPollock. Wagner’s essay is lacking in concrete content about the Rathbone films themselves but rather the films are used to make theoretical points and it’s written to appear as an explanation of why she did what she did with a group of students. The other Thomas Leitch, “Reframing the Victorians” has some good information and insight into specific films and icons: there were 80 (that’s right, 80) silent film adaptations of texts by Arthur Conan Doyle, 75 of them chronicling the adventures of Sherlock Holmes. Since then there have been a long list of Sherlock heroes, we just know about the most famous.
Nowadays I’d say that Jeremy Brett is considered the central consensus figure for an embodiment of Holmes; but this preference might be a more modern taste. It was said in the 1960s Laurence Olivier was perfect for Darcy; then in 1995 Colin Firth displaced him. Each era has its preferences.
The 1988 films are Jeremy Bretts, and if you don’t know them, Linda, you are in for a tremendous treat. You can start to watch PBS on Thursday nights where they are regularly rerun. But they are available at Netflix and as DVDs. They begin in 1984; there were 3 seasons of one hour ones in the 1980s general (names like Adventures of Sherlock Holmes ….), one 2 hour Hounds, another 2 hour Sign of Four, and then there was a series in the 1990s (Memoirs of Sherlock). I think this last although Brett was old contains some of the finest ever, especially one with Ciaran Hinds, “The cardboard box.” I don’t think the suspense scary element is what is emphasized; these are brilliant psychological dramas. Those with feminist content the feminist content is somewhat brought out, like “Abbey Grange” about wife-beating:
https://ellenandjim.wordpress.com/2010/11/09/two-sherlock-holmes-tales-the-violent-labyrinth/
They are emotionally violent.
Ellen
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