Mr
Holmes review – the old sleuth on the trail of his younger self
Ian
McKellen brings affection and grace to a whimsical portrait of an
elderly Sherlock Holmes, struggling with his memory and his myth
Mark Kermode,
Observer film critic
Monday 22 June 2015
09.00 BST /
http://www.theguardian.com/film/2015/jun/22/mr-holmes-review-mark-kermode
Is there a version
of Sherlock Holmes we haven’t seen? Screen incarnations of Arthur
Conan Doyle’s most celebrated character date back to the birth of
cinema (the tricksy short Sherlock Holmes Baffled was made at the
turn of the century), and Conan Doyle himself praised actor Eille
Norwood’s “wonderful impersonation of Holmes” in shorts and
features from the early 1920s. John Barrymore, Raymond Massey and
Clive Brook all played the detective before The Hound of the
Baskervilles (1939) established Basil Rathbone as the iconic bearer
of the deerstalker and pipe combo. More recently we’ve had Robert
Downey Jr as a pugilist detective in Guy Ritchie’s punchy reboots,
and Benedict Cumberbatch as a thoroughly modern Sherlock in the hit
BBC TV series.
Now comes Sir Ian
McKellen, playing Holmes as a lonely recluse, slowly succumbing to
senility. The year is 1947, nearly 30 years after the troubling
events which ultimately caused Sherlock to retreat to the country,
and the care of his beloved bees. Attended by housekeeper Mrs Munro
(Laura Linney, of no fixed accent) and her young son Roger (rising
star Milo Parker), the rheumy-eyed 93-year-old dithers hither and
yon, his step uncertain, his face saggy and liver-spotted. By day, he
potters around his apiary, growls at his doctor (McKellen’s range
of grunts is as wide as Timothy Spall’s Mr Turner), and supplements
his diet with prickly ash, a rare plant gathered in Japan with
alleged healing properties. But as he struggles to remember the
details of his life, so we spiral back into the past – to the case
that proved his undoing, and to the eastern trip from which he
brought back more than mere medication.
Reuniting McKellen
with Gods and Monsters director Bill Condon, this adaptation of
Tideland writer Mitch Cullin’s A Slight Trick of the Mind tells
another tale of an ageing legend and his troubled protege. There’s
a hint of Gandalf’s melancholic magic in McKellen’s portrayal of
a curmudgeon who been there and back again, but it’s in the
contrast between the film’s gently juggled time periods that the
sparks really fly. Excellent makeup work by Dave and Lou Elsey adds
to the illusion that scenes were shot decades apart as Sherlock’s
failing memory carries him from Sussex in 1947 to Baker Street in
1919, and his encounter with bereaved Ann Kelmot (Hattie Morahan).
Here, his skin is taut, his eyes clear, his senses sharp – although
his understanding of emotion remains elementary; faced with the
otherworldly tones of a glass harmonica, Holmes reads the clues but
hears no music. Only later, when his ruthless logic is lost, does he
tune in to something approaching sympathy, and all the ragged ends
that come with it.
Nodding toward such
revisionist texts as Billy Wilder’s The Private Life of Sherlock
Holmes (1970) and Nicholas Meyer’s 1974 novel The Seven-Per-cent
Solution (filmed in 1976), Mr Holmes unpicks Sherlock’s unravelling
state of mind in a manner both investigative and avuncular. From
Tobias A Schliessler’s glowing cinematography to Carter Burwell’s
reassuring score and Martin Childs’s handsomely detailed production
design, there are few sharp edges here. Instead there’s a sense of
playfulness as Holmes wrestles with the artifice of his legend:
living across the road from 221B and thus evading American tourists,
apologising for not brandishing the hat and pipe (an illustrator’s
invention), responding reluctantly to Roger’s demands that he
theatrically recount his mother’s movements by analysing her hair
and clothing. At one point, he even goes to the movies to watch a
fictional Sherlock Holmes, and scoffs at the matinee preening of
Nicholas Rowe, who (in a further level of metatextuality) once played
the lead in Young Sherlock Holmes.
Like its eponymous
hero, the film drifts in and out of focus as it sifts through its
deck of memories, a touch broad here, a little undercooked there,
sometimes satirical, more often whimsical. Yet Jeffrey Hatcher’s
script neatly ties together the interplay between myth and memory –
both unreliable and malleable – while McKellen nurtures his
character’s changing nature with affection and grace.
‘I
relate to the way Sherlock talks about death’: Ian McKellen on his
new film role
Stage
giant relishes the challenge of playing detective in old age
“For
Sherlock, in this story, it is quite a race against time. It is not
quite like that for me. I don't intend to retire”
Sir Ian McKellen
Vanessa Thorpe
Sunday 8 February
2015 00.06 GMT /
http://www.theguardian.com/culture/2015/feb/08/sherlock-film-mr-holmes-ian-mckellen
There will be no
deerstalker. There will be no pipe. In their place will be a straw
hat and a walking stick. But with the appetite for Sherlock Holmes
growing after the worldwide success of Benedict Cumberbatch’s
television portrayal, Sir Ian McKellen is about to give fans of the
great sleuth more of what they crave.
The 75-year-old
actor’s new film, Mr Holmes, has its world premiere at the Berlin
film festival on Sunday and offers a vision of Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle’s detective living quietly in retirement in Sussex, keeping
bees. Directed by Bill Condon, the film is about a crime, but also
about age, unreliable memory and the power of the past.
Preparation for the
part has allowed the award-winning Shakespearean actor to reflect on
his own age. “Mr Holmes really is as much about being old as it is
about the crime,” McKellen said this weekend. “I do relate to the
ease with which Sherlock talks about death. That ease is something
that has come to me and to a lot of my friends. Death is suddenly
ever-present, although we all ignore it when we are young.
“For Sherlock, in
this story, it is a race against time, and it is not quite like that
for me. I don’t intend to retire. I will go on working on and off.
I am happily going on with my life.”
McKellen was not
daunted by the task of playing the most celebrated literary creation
ever to solve a mystery. “Sherlock has already been played by 120
actors and it’s rather the same thing as playing Hamlet. The role
doesn’t belong to you and, if you think it does, you have the wrong
idea.
“There have been
lots of manifestations of Holmes. Possibly the most famous now is
Robert Downey Jnr’s, or perhaps Benedict Cumberbatch’s, who is a
more traditional Sherlock in many ways.”
Yet it is an earlier
incarnation of Holmes that casts the longest shadow for McKellen.
“People of my generation tend to look to Jeremy Brett, who played
him on television. He did it for such a long time and so
astonishingly well. I would not even want to challenge that
performance. My little Holmes adventure is nothing like anybody
else’s Holmes.”
Burnley-born
McKellen was drawn to the screenplay’s treatment of memory. “I
have been thinking about my own memory recently because I am thinking
about writing a memoir. I have not kept a diary, which would have
made it a lot easier. There are plenty of things I have forgotten and
it is usually a great pleasure if someone does remind me of a lost
memory. But memory works like that. It discards things and keeps
others. It has its reasons.”
The film is based on
American writer Mitch Cullin’s 2005 book A Slight Trick of the
Mind, and has the premise that Holmes is struggling with the early
stages of dementia and trying to recall his last case.
“He is happily
living as an apiarist, a long way from London and from crime, but he
knows his memory is not what it was. In the film you see flashbacks
of him solving the crime and he is trying to remember how he did it.
He knows he did,” said McKellen. “The film actually starts with
scenes in Japan, where Holmes is trying to find a sort of elixir that
will help him regain his memories.”
McKellen is busy
learning a part, which he will play opposite Sir Anthony Hopkins, for
a television film of Ronald Harwood’s The Dresser, and admitted he
now finds learning lines a chore. “My own memory has not given me
problems yet when it comes to work, although learning lines for an
actor is not the way people imagine it. It is not like learning a
list; it is about connecting emotions with a story. Some of my
friends tell me they will not work in live theatre again because of
the difficulty they have with lines.”
For the actor, an
unexpected bonus of taking the screen role of Holmes was a close
encounter with bees. “One of the great joys for me was going to
look at the bees kept on the top of Fortnum & Mason’s store in
Piccadilly,” said Mc Kellen. “They make honey for the shop, and
mostly feed on the flowers and trees in Buckingham Palace Gardens and
the surrounding parks, so it is actually purer than much rural honey,
where a lot of insecticide and sprays are used.
“Before we started
filming in the country, some hives were planted nearby, so they would
have time to adjust. I had to deal with them in the film and I am
happy to say there were no accidents. I was fully expecting to be
stung. I did have to take my glove off at one point, but bees are not
interested in stinging you.”
Conan Doyle
aficionados will find nothing to offend them in the new film,
McKellen suspects. “Anyone who loves those stories will enjoy it.
One of the key ideas is that the Sherlock people know was a bit of a
creation of John Watson and not the real man. This Holmes much
prefers a cigar to a pipe and has never worn a deerstalker.”
The original Holmes
stories are not always as the public imagines, McKellen argues. “They
are not all set in London. I recently read The Valley of Fear for
Radio 4 and much of that is set in America.”
How could you not mention what is really the definitive screen interpretation of Holmes? Jeremy Brett.
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