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IMDb > Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror (1942)
Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror
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Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror (1942) Más información en IMDbPro »

Fotos (ver todos los 9 | slideshow)

Revisión

Calificación de los usuarios:
6.8/10   1,361 votos
MOVIEmeter: ?
No change in popularity this week. See rank & trends on IMDbPro.
Director:
John Rawlins
Escritores:
Arthur Conan Doyle (story) and
Robert Hardy Andrews (adaptation) ...
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View company contact information for Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror on IMDbPro.
Fecha de Lanzamiento:
18 septiembre 1942 (USA) más
Género:
Crimen | Suspenso | Misterio más
Frase comercial:
THE MASTER MINDS OF MYSTERY! (original print ad - all caps)
Plot:
England, at the start of World War Two. Mysterious wireless broadcasts, apparently from Nazi Germany are heard over the BBC... más | add synopsis
Plot Keywords:
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Comentarios de los usuarios:
I Wonder if Lord Haw Haw saw this? más

Reparto

  (Reparto completo)
Basil Rathbone ... Sherlock Holmes
Nigel Bruce ... Doctor Watson
Evelyn Ankers ... Kitty
Reginald Denny ... Sir Evan Barham
Thomas Gomez ... Meade
Henry Daniell ... Alfred Lloyd
Montagu Love ... Gen. Jerome Lawford
Olaf Hytten ... Adm. Sir John Prentiss
Leyland Hodgson ... Capt. Roland Shore
listado alfabético del resto del reparto:
Arthur Blake ... Unidentified Character [AFI catalog name: Crosbie] (unconfirmed)
George Sherwood ... Unidentified Character [Cabby, per AFI catalog] (unconfirmed)
Donald Stuart ... Unidentified Character [AFI Catalog name: Grady] (unconfirmed)
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Más detalles

También conocida como:
Sherlock Holmes Saves London (USA) (working title)
Voice of Terror (UK)
La voz del terror (Spain) [es]
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Duración:
65 min
País:
USA
Idioma:
Inglés
Relación de Aspecto:
1.37 : 1 más
Sonido:
Mono (Western Electric Recording)
Clasificación:
UK:U
Compañía:
Universal Pictures más

Cosas divertidas

Trivialidades:
This movie was originally going to be called "Sherlock Holmes Saves London" but the title was changed before release. más
Errores:
Errores Reales: No-one - not even Sherlock Holmes - would be able to phone the BBC and ask for a specific record to be played on air immediately, in the manner of a jukebox. There were no "BBC request stations." más
Conexiones de Película:
Apariciones The Invisible Man (1933) más
Banda de Sonido:
Papa Was A Rollin' Stone más

preguntas frecuentes

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
16 out of 20 people found the following comment useful:-
I Wonder if Lord Haw Haw saw this?, 6 August 2005
6/10
Author: theowinthrop de United States

The first two Basil Rathbone - Nigel Bruce Sherlock Holmes outings (THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES and THE ADVENTURES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES) are usually considered the best of the series, although several of the "modernized" ones (THE SCARLET CLAW, SHERLOCK HOLMES FACES DEATH, THE HOUSE OF FEAR) have really really clever mystery stories in them. This one, the first of the 20th Century FOX modern stories, is based on HIS LAST BOW. But it has an interesting modern source to the tale, as well as a secondary source from a non-Conan Doyle writer.

The original Conan Doyle story is (chronologically) the last one in the canon (of 56 short stories and four novels by Sir Arthur). HIS LAST BOW was written in 1917, and was supposed to be a memoir of Holmes final espionage service for the British Government in wrecking the espionage work of one Heinrich Von Bork, the Kaiser's most brilliant agent in England. There are references in it to zeppelins and other wartime machines and events (including the involvement of Irish - American allies to the Kaiser against the hated British). Suffice it to say that it has, what is the classic ending (in terms of dialog) for Holmes and Watson. This is the "There's an east wind, Watson...." dialog, which actually ends this story. I am glad (at least for this much) that the screenplay writers knew enough to use this wonderful dialog to conclude the movie.

To bring it up to date (1939 - 40), the story includes reference to the antics of one of the most aggravating people the British people faced between 1939 and 1945: Mr. William Joyce, a.k.a. "Lord Haw Haw". There are elements of Joyce in the character of Meade (Thomas Gomez) and the basic story in the film about the radio broadcasts. Joyce was an Irish American (he was born in New York City), who moved to England in the 1920s. He was a very intelligent man, who felt he was ignored by too many inferior people, and harbored great resentments as a result. This is Meade to a tee. Joyce happened to have a wonderful speaking voice, but he looked rather ordinary. He gravitated to Fascist circles, soon rising in the British Union of Fascists (BUF) and becoming a leading speaker and propagandist for Sir Oswald Mosley (the would-be Fascist dictator of England).

Mosley was quite an egomaniac, but so was Joyce. After awhile a split developed between the men, as Joyce felt that Mosley was depending too much on British democracy (which Joyce despised). Joyce increasingly looked with admiration at the Nazi model (more so than Mosley was ever willing to look). When the two nations drifted into war Joyce traveled to Germany and offered his services to Josef Goebbels. Goebbels knew a good thing when he could use it, so he agreed. Joyce (once war began) had a German passport that was dated prior to September 1, 1939. But he also had a British passport and an American passport. Joyce planned carefully to keep all three - just in case.

Soon he began broadcasting in his nasal, but pleasing voice, as "Lord Haw Haw". He was an expert in presenting brutality as an expected future way of life - Osama Bin Laden and Al Quaeda could take good lessons from Joyce's still surviving propaganda recordings. For the first three years of the war the British public had to live through his broadcasts, on top of the Blitz by his allies in the Luftwaffe. At the time THE VOICE OF TERROR was made, everyone in Britain, the United States, and the world knew who was the model for that radio voice of doom in the movie.

I don't know if Joyce ever saw the film, but he probably would have dismissed it as allied propaganda (which it was). It might even have flattered him that he was targeted in it. At the time the Axis was winning the war (Stalingrad, El Alemein, and Midway were in the future). But as the war turned against the Axis, Joyce found that his role in Nazi circles was not as grand as he had hoped. Had they won against England, probably he would have been important (as Meade hoped to be in the film), but as England and the U.S. and the Soviet Union advanced (and were gradually joined by France in 1944), Hitler and Goebbels basically treated Joyce as a paid employee. He took to drink - he could see the war was going badly, despite the propaganda he spewed out. When the regime collapsed in ruins in May 1945, Joyce got shot by an Allied soldier, and was returned to the British to stand trial for treason.

It's an interesting trial (if you study the business about the three passports). To this day there is an actually good argument to say Joyce had not committed treason in 1939 - 45 because the German passport made him a German citizen. But his defense was brushed aside, he was found guilty, and he was hanged.

The third element in the film was the novel, THE GREAT IMPERSONATION, by E. Phillips Oppenheimer. Set before World War I, it describes how a German aristocrat meets his exact double (Sir Everard Dominey) in Africa, and decides to kill him and take his place in British society in order to help German war plans. This is part of the conclusion of the film, regarding one of the council.

It is a good film, because of the performances of Rathbone, Bruce, Henry Daniell, Reginald Denny, Evelyn Ankers, and (best of all) Thomas Gomez as the power-hungry/paranoid Meade. But it is not among the best of the Sherlock Holmes series. As for "Lord Haw Haw" it is not the only film that his character popped up in. Trevor Howard plays a character based on him in RUN FOR THE SUN with Richard Widmark.

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