The Hound of the Baskervilles (1958)
Director: Terence Fisher
Movie review
From Time Out Film Guide
The best Sherlock Holmes film ever made, and one of Hammer's finest movies. Fisher, at the peak of his career, used Conan Doyle's plot to establish a stylish dialectic between Holmes' nominally rational Victorian milieu and the dark, fabulous cruelty behind the Baskerville legend. This opposition is expressed within the first ten minutes, when he moves from the 'legend' with its strong connotations of the Hellfire Club (the nobleman tormenting a young girl with demonic satisfaction) to the rational eccentricities of Baker Street. Holmes is indeed the perfect Fisher hero, the Renaissance scholar with strong mystical undertones, and Cushing gives one of his very best performances, ably supported by Morell (who does not make the usual mistake of overplaying Watson). Lee is in equally good form as the Baskerville heir, and Jack Asher's muted Technicolor photography is superb.Author: DP
Cast & crew
Director: Terence Fisher
Producer: Anthony Hinds
Cast: Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee, André Morell, Marla Landi, David Oxley, Miles Malleson, Francis de Wolff, John Le Mesurier full cast
Genre(s): Thrillers
Duration: 87 mins
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