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The Sleeping Cardinal

A card cheat is threatened with exposure into joining a criminal enterprise that Sherlock Holmes believes is controlled by Professor Moriarity.

Top Cast

  • Arthur Wontner

    Arthur Wontner

    Sherlock Holmes

  • Ian Fleming

    Ian Fleming

    Dr. John Watson

  • Minnie Rayner

    Minnie Rayner

    Mrs. Hudson

  • Leslie Perrins

    Leslie Perrins

    Ronald Adair

  • Jane Welsh

    Jane Welsh

    Kathleen Adair

  • Norman McKinnel

    Norman McKinnel

    Prof. Robert Moriarty / Col. Henslowe

  • William Fazan

    William Fazan

    Thomas Fisher

  • Sydney King

    Sydney King

    Tony Rutherford

  • Philip Hewland

    Philip Hewland

    Inspector Lestrade

Overview

A card cheat is threatened with exposure into joining a criminal enterprise that Sherlock Holmes believes is controlled by Professor Moriarity.

Rating

5.5 / 10
16 Reviews
0 Popular

2 Reviews

  • JPV852
    JPV852
    6 Dec 31, 2021

    Watchable mystery-drama with Arthur Wontner and Ian Fleming as Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson respectively. A bit slow at times but I still was engaged enough with the mystery element and liked Wontner's portrayal of the classic character. **3.25/5**

  • CinemaSerf
    CinemaSerf
    6 Jun 13, 2022

    Arthur Wontner ("Sherlock Holmes") and Ian Fleming ("Dr. Watson") really do foil well together as our deductive duo investigating a dastardly counterfeiting conspiracy conjured from the ever-devious mind of their nemesis "Prof. Moriarty" (? - that'd be telling...). Not unusually, this plot strays quite far from the original serial - as do the characterisations, but Wontner is strong as the sleuth and Fleming offers a much more cerebral contribution as the pair have to thwart the scheming Professor. The story has all of the usual twists, turns and red herrings - but what sets it aside a little is the way in which we, the audience, are given clues by "Holmes" - not always obvious, indeed sometimes they are so obscure as to render all but the most advanced criminologist baffled - and that's part of the enjoyment. We are encouraged to take part, ourselves - and it's not a simple deduction! I've watched this twice now and though, of course, there is no actual jeopardy with the end result, the second time I noticed more by way of guidance from the deft Wontner. Technically - well, it's not the greatest. Though the lighting can help the atmosphere a bit, it doesn't much help us see what's going on half the time; and the script can be a bit dry and muddled at times. I won't fib - Rathbone/Bruce are my definitives in these roles, but if you can put comparisons to the back of your mind, and treat with this as an original - then it's a good watch.

Recommendations

A Study in Terror

When Watson reads from the newspaper there have been two similar murders near Whitechapel in a few days, Sherlock Holmes' sharp deductive is immediately stimulated to start its merciless method of elimination after observation of every apparently meaningless detail. He guesses right the victims must be street whores, and doesn't need long to work his way trough a pawn shop, an aristocratic family's stately home, a hospital and of course the potential suspects and (even unknowing) witnesses who are the cast of the gradually unraveled story of the murderer and his motive.

A Study in Terror

6.2 1965