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The Man Who Was Sherlock Holmes

Der Mann, der Sherlock Holmes war

Germany

1937

112 Min
Black and White
1.37:1
German
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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DIR Karl Hartl

PROD Alfred Greven

SCR Karl Hartl, Robert A. Stemmle

DP Fritz Arno Wagner

CAST Hans Albers, Heinz Rühmann, Marieluise Claudius, Hansi Knoteck, Hilde Weissner, Siegfried Schürenberg, Paul Bildt, Günther Ballier

ED Gertrud Hinz-Nischwitz

PROD DES Otto Hunte, Willy Schiller

MUSIC Hans Sommer

SOUND Hermann Fritzsching

Synopsis

Hans Albers plays the detective Morris Flynn, and Heinz Rühmann his assistant Macky McMacpherson. They stop a train to Brussels at night, and due to their behaviour and clothes, personnel believe that they are Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson. This is indeed Flynn’s and McMacpherson’s intention, but they claim not to be the famous detective and his friend, and they urge them not to tell anybody. They interrogate people in order to make their cover perfect, among them two attractive sisters, Mary and Jane Berry, who travel to accept their uncle’s heir.

In Brussels the would-be Holmes and Watson stay at Hotel Palace, and immediately police asks them to solve a case. During the 1910 World Exposition stamps have been stolen and replaced by falsifications. Observed and later attacked by gangsters, Flynn and McMacpherson find out that the two sister’s uncle has been the forger and boss of the gang. Their working place is found in the cellary of the uncle’s castle the sisters inherited.

Flynn and McMacpherson are put on trial for impersonating the famous detective Sherlock Holmes and his friend. Then a laughing man stands up, who had observed the duo several times, and reveals himself as Arthur Conan Doyle. —Wikipedia

Director

Original

Karl Hartl

Karl Hartl (10 May 1899 – 29 August 1978) was an Austrian film director. Born in Vienna, Hartl began his film career at the Austrian Sascha-Film company of Alexander Kolowrat and from 1919 was assistant to the Hungarian director Alexander Korda. As a production manager, he in the 1920s accompanied Korda to Berlin, until in 1926 he returned to Vienna to work for his former class-mate director Gustav Ucicky.

From 1930 he worked for Universum Film AG (UFA) and gave his debut as director of Ein Burschenlied aus Heidelberg (“A Fraternity Song from Heidelberg”) starring Hans Brausewetter and Willi Forst, with young Billy Wilder as a screenwriter. Together with Luis Trenker he directed the Gebirgsjäger drama Berge in Flammen (“Mountains in Flames”) in 1931. He then experimented with other genres, for example the comedy Die Gräfin von Monte Cristo (“The Countess of Monte Cristo”) (1932) with Brigitte Helm and Gustaf Gründgens, and in the same year achieved his final breakthrough with… read more

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