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szdaily -> Movies -> 
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows
    2012-01-13  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    THE latest film featuring the sleuthing duo of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson, as re-imagined by Guy Ritchie, is strong on romping high adventure and action and modest in terms of actual by-the-numbers detective work. But “Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows” certainly delivers in terms of good-natured entertainment and has enough style and panache to keep action fans happy.

    Director Ritchie smartly keeps things moving at a breakneck pace, peppering the film with impressive cameos that help the link to the successful first film (Rachel McAdams’s Irene Adler and Eddie Marsan’s Inspector Lestrade make brief but memorable appearances) and adding to the pot a deliciously intelligent performance by Stephen Fry as Holmes’s smarter older brother Mycroft.

    Of course, Holmes’ purists and devotees of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s original source novels may well continue to be mortified by Robert Downey Jr.’s more muscular and skittish interpretation of Sherlock Holmes (no Deerstalker here), but the film is a freewheeling pleasure in terms of action and adventure.

    “Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows” sees Holmes up against his greatest enemy. A criminal mastermind has been coordinating a series of murders and bombings around the world and Holmes has finally unraveled the thread that links them to one man, the seemingly honest academic Professor James Moriarty (Jared Harris), a man dubbed “the Napoleon of crime.”

    The only real fly in the ointment for Holmes and his unveiling of Moriarty as an arch-criminal is Dr. Watson’s long-planned wedding to Mary Watson (the charming Kelly Reilly). After a boozy and bloody stag night, with Mycroft Holmes also in attendance, the wedding finally takes place, and the happy couple head off on a train to Brighton for their honeymoon.

    But Moriarty and his men view Watson as a target given that Holmes is on his trail, and an attack is planned on the train. In an impressive series of set piece sequences Holmes (disguised of course) and Watson fight off the attackers, and Mary is reluctantly sent to stay with Mycroft for safety. In a choice scene Mary comes across an unrepentantly naked Mycroft wandering his house, with Fry bringing to the character his expected blend of wit, humor, intelligence and naked sophistication.

    Joining forces with a mysterious Gypsy named Sim (played in her first English-speaking role by Swedish actress Noomi Rapace, who starred in the Swedish “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo” films) who has her own personal reasons for stalking Moriarty, the detective duo travel to France, Germany and finally to Switzerland where Moriarty has evil plans for a peace conference being staged at the Reichenbach Falls.

    As with his original Sherlock Holmes film, Richie makes extensive use of slo-mo for some of the action sequences, particularly an escape through German woods as their heroes are bombed and shot at, and replicates moments where Holmes works out in brutal slow motion how he will take down an enemy before repeating the footage in bone-crunching normal time.

    The movie opens in Shenzhen on Sunday.

(SD-Agencies)

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