Quick Search
| Science Book Engineering Book, schools books, physical education book, educational book, educational books, ... |
| toolbar powered by free-ebook-download.net |
![]() |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Sherlock Holmes is among an elite set of fictional characters who has outlived his creator and even his own written death (The Final Problem1893). Holmes continues to solve crimes as written by a number of authors including this 1974 version, The Seven-Per-Cent Solution by Nicholas Meyer. The book was made into a film in 1976, which I've enjoyed watching a number of times. One thing that is universal across all these Sherlock Holmes tales (those by Doyle and these later ones) is that the stories are never told from Holmes's point of the view. In the Doyle style, the job of reporting Holmes's adventures falls on Dr. John Watson. Holmes throughout remains too unusual and too superhuman to understand, though Watson and other characters try. Another commonality of the post-Doyle stories is the inclusion of famous historical figures and events. Sherlock Holmes is far better traveled and even more famous in these novels than he ever was in the Doyle's short stories. The Seven-Per-Cent Solution is a classic example of Holmes-as-celebrity because he meets and manages to solve a mystery with Dr. Sigmund Freud. In the film, maybe because Sherlock Holmes seems to lend himself to becoming a steampunk James Bond in movies, Dr. Freud is somewhat plausible. The entire cinematic adaptation borders on the surreal as an attempt to visualize the cocaine stupor Holmes is in for the first half of the story. That surreal approach makes Freud just one more aspect of the wackiness that is the 1976 film. In the book, Dr. Freud seems like a forced detail. The whole business of Holmes's out of control addiction and the trickery that Watson goes through to get his friend to Vienna doesn't work. It's corny and out of character for both Watson and Holmes. It is a ridiculous means to and end to get the two to where the mystery is taking place. There is nothing about the mystery of the missing heiress that couldn't be done in London or an estate in the countryside. Her ties to the Kaiser could still have been part of the plot without the silly trip to Vienna. So if you like Sherlock Holmes stories, keep in mind that Nicholas Meyer's novel is flawed. See, though, if you can, the 1976 film adaptation of his novel. It takes advantage of the goofier bits of the novel to make a very entertaining film. DownloadLink: Quote: [url=http://url14.com/checkvirus.php?id=aHR0cDovL3JhcGlkc2hhcmUuY29tL2Zp bGVzLzEzMTM0MzQ0Ni9BQkRTSFRTUFNBQi5MZW1vbg==]http://rapidshare.com/files/131343446/ABDSHTSPSAB.Lemon[/url] File Instructions: Rename the file from .Lemon to .Rar . Extract it with Winrar. Password = Quote: [url=http://url14.com/checkvirus.php?id=aHR0cDovL3d3dy5sZW1vbnNoYXJlLm5l dC8=]www.lemonshare.net[/url] |
|||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Sherlock Holmes - The Creeping Man AudioBook | topso | Science Book | 0 | 08-30-2009 08:20 PM |
| Sherlock Holmes - The Stockbrokers Clerk AudioBook | topso | Science Book | 0 | 08-30-2009 08:20 PM |
| Sherlock Holmes - The Three Garridebs AudioBook | topso | Science Book | 0 | 08-30-2009 08:19 PM |
| Sherlock Holmes - The Greek Interpreter AudioBook | topso | Science Book | 0 | 08-30-2009 07:10 AM |
| Sherlock Holmes - 16 stories (audiobook) | topso | Science Book | 0 | 08-30-2009 07:04 AM |