Hello, moviegoers! Today I want to introduce Pyramid of Fear, also known as "Young Sherlock Holmes" and ú"Young Sherlock Holmes and the Pyramid of Fear".
Pyramid of Fear is a Mystery movie which asks the question "What would have happened if Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson had meet while they were at school, and been forced to solve a crime?" As you can imagine, it is a non-faithful-to-canon interpretation of Doyle's most famous character, and the film tells us straight that the plot is original, not an adaptation from an Arthur C. Doyle story, and that in contradicts the canon.
So that aside, what does this movie offer.
The first thing I noticed while playing the movie is that it builds athmosphere very effectively. Something that bothers me so much is that modern movies are failing hard at setting scene and athmosphere, to the point there are Karlof movies from the 50s that do a better job. Here, English gentlemen look like English gentlement, hawkers look like hawkers, and the setting is quite well done.
The plot involves Holmes and Watson trying to solve a series of crimes after somebody they know dies in mysterious circumpstances and the Police refuses to open an investigation, regarding the death as a suicide. As is to be expected, it is full of instances of Holmes displaying superhuman powers of observation and deduction, but overall I think the film has more in common with Indiana Jones than with mystery thrillers.
Holmes comes across as a bit of an arrogant kid who knows it all, including
the fact he _does_ know it all. He manages not to be exactly dislikeable because you can tell right away he is a friendly dude and his heart is in the right place. On the other hand, Watson is as useless as it gets. He should get his last name changed from Watson to Burden. He eventually gets his moment in the spotlight, overcomming his useless burdeness, which is sad in a way... since he is no longer a complete dead weight, he won¤'t be able to apply for a government handout for disability :-(
The bottom line is that, while the caracters are ok, they are not the reason why you would watch the movie.
It is a movie from Spierberg, and it shows. The special effects are top tier, specially when you consider it is such an old movie. The bad guys in the story use a powerful hallucinogen to get people killed - they administrate it to their victim, and the victim starts having hallucinations which eventually force them to do something stupid (such as jumping through a window) and get them killed. The hallucination effects are great and include the first instance of a computer generated realistic character, a badass knight made of pieces from a broken stain-glass window.
The detective work shown in the movie is not impressive. It is sufficient, and certainly it will get you engaged, but I cannot stop thinking they could have done some things differently. There are some instances of A Clue Appears -> Holmes Checks an Information Source (book or whatever) -> A Voiceover Tells is the Conclusions Drawn from the Clue. I think they could have done less Voiceover exposition and found awn way to convey the information better. Still, the investigation is always moving forward so you don't get to get bored, and this is an achievement.
The adventure and action scenes are fine and, make no mistake, there
is more fencing, more sneaking into unholy temples and more rescuing the damsel in distress than detective work. At some point the film felt like Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Also, the chants of the evil cultists are quite memorable and some people I know thinks those are the reason why you should watch the movie :-) In fact they go the Saturn Award for Best Music.
In conclusion: and ok juvenile flick that, while not groundbreaking, has aged very well and is still enjoyable today.
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