The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother

  • Review Date: January 27, 2011
  • PG
  • Genre: Comedy
  • 1975
 Review

Common Sense Media says

Good-natured Sherlock spoof with some dirty-joke humor.
greenON: Content is age-appropriate for kids this age.
yellowPAUSE: Know your child; some content
may not be right for some kids.
redOFF: Not age-appropriate for kids this age.
not for kidsNOT FOR KIDS: Not appropriate for kids any age.

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Quality
 
Sometimes media can be age appropriate but a real waste of time. Our star rating assesses the media's overall quality.

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Parents say

Not yet rated

Kids say

Not yet rated

What parents need to know

Parents need to know that this genial spoof has some dirty-joke humor, including some groping and two shots of male bare butts. If released today, it might get a very light PG-13 -- nothing Austin Powers smutty, though. There are a few swear words and violence that is pretty much unrealistic slapstick.

  • Mostly a spoof without many clear messages, but the finale has the not-speaking-to-each-other Holmes brothers expressing gratitude and appreciation to each other.
  • Sigurson Holmes isn't stupid at all -- though he's not as brilliant as his big brother, and typically acts rude, arrogantly, and on hotheaded impulses. Stereotyping of Italians as opera- (and pasta-sauce-) loving buffoons.
  • Swordfighting (almost never drawing blood) and crotch kicks. Slapstick wrestling, punching, and head bops. Threats made with guns. A threatened peril with a cartoonishly big buzz-saw blade. Falls from great heights.
  • A comic villain gropes at the leading lady's "boobies" (in the context of a musical number). Sigurson fondles the heroine's breast and strips down to assume a sexual position -- the premise being it's a necessary interrogation technique. Two male bare butts.
  • Some occasional language, including "s--t," "Christ" as an exclamation, "whore," "fart," "buggers," "testicles," and "winkle" (as a euphemism for testicles).
  • Not applicable.
  • Quite a bit of cigarette and pipe smoking. Social drinking, apparently of beer. A musical number sings about drinking "some very sexy wine," which is then acted out, with some kind of knockout pills in the goblets.

What's the story?

In foggy 1891 London, it turns out there are two consulting detectives named S. Holmes -- the illustrious Sherlock (Douglas Wilmer), and his estranged, furiously jealous younger brother Sigurson (Gene Wilder). When a scandalous diplomatic document is stolen, one of the parties involved is the evil Professor Moriarty (Leo McKern), afflicted with a nervous compulsion to do something really, really mean every 24 minutes. Sherlock decides to deceive the master villain by pretending to leave town, handing the case over to Sigurson, along with a pretty music-hall songstress (Madeline Kahn) who lies about practically everything, and a messenger-sidekick (Marty Feldman) with a "photographic sense of hearing."


Is it any good?

 

After his success in Mel Brooks comedies, Gene Wilder made his directing debut here with a genre farce that, like Young Frankenstein, shows respect and real affection for the material being burlesqued, not just anything-goes yucks. Though gags are uneven -- a horse-carriage fight scene using a giant fake hand vs. giant fake shoe is hilarious; a reference to the classic short story "The Lady or the Tiger?" is merely odd -- and the plot just sort of turns into confetti after a while, there's a consistent sense of fun throughout. Despite a few naughty bits, teens should jam to the infectious, let's-put-on-a-show enthusiasm (occasionally the cast bursts into a loony dance number, the "Kangaroo Hop"), not to mention the built-in empathy factor for younger brothers everywhere. Deductive logic, an essential part of the Sherlock stories, is strangely absent. Yet one hardly notices.


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What families can talk about

  • Families can talk about the inferiority-complex problem Sigurson has with his brother Sherlock. Can any of your family members relate?

  • What kind of humor is this? What other movies does it remind you of? What kinds of things make you laugh?

  • What do kids know about Sherlock Holmes? How can you find out more?


This review was written by Charles Cassady Jr.

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This review was written by Charles Cassady Jr.
Topics:adventures
Studio:Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment
Director:Gene Wilder
Cast:Dom DeLuise, Gene Wilder, Madeline Kahn
Genre:Comedy
Run time:91 minutes
Theatrical release date:December 15, 1975
DVD release date:April 4, 2006
MPAA rating:PG

This review was written by Charles Cassady Jr.
 

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About our rating system
ON: Content is age-appropriate for kids this age.
PAUSE: Know your child; some content may not be right for some kids.
OFF: Not age-appropriate for kids this age.
Learning ratings
BEST: Really engaging, great learning approach.
GOOD: Pretty engaging, good learning approach.
FAIR: Somewhat engaging, OK learning approach.
NOT FOR LEARNING: Not recommended for learning.

 

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