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478 of 487 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's Elementary, this is a Must Purchase!
MPI Home Video has made a terrific decision here, combining all of its previously released DVD boxed sets of this classic 14-film series into one affordable package. It is a must buy for any Sherlock Holmes fan, or anyone who enjoys classic mysteries, who does not already have all of these wonderful films.

When these were first released on DVD it was truly a...
Published on April 10, 2006 by E. Hornaday

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249 of 281 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Fun films, but TERRIBLE package...
I always thought these DVDs were greatly overpriced, no matter what the format, but when I found the set for $79.99 at a warehouse retailer, I finally succumbed. Even at that price, these are STILL overpriced. The box is rubbish, the plastic cases secured by one thin piece of tape that disengaged as soon as I opened the box. No booklet of chapters, nothing except a...
Published on September 5, 2006 by C. Williamson


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478 of 487 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's Elementary, this is a Must Purchase!, April 10, 2006
By 
E. Hornaday (Lawrenceville, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection (DVD)
MPI Home Video has made a terrific decision here, combining all of its previously released DVD boxed sets of this classic 14-film series into one affordable package. It is a must buy for any Sherlock Holmes fan, or anyone who enjoys classic mysteries, who does not already have all of these wonderful films.

When these were first released on DVD it was truly a cause for celebration, as it represented the completed painstaking restoration of all 14 classic films by Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce.

The UCLA Theatre Archives did an award-winning job in restoring and thus preserving these great films from 35mm master copies into the digital format, sometimes literally being forced to piece together the celluloid remnants that they found.

It took the archivists several years to complete the entire project, but was well worth the wait. The result is that the black and white images seem as fresh today as when the films were released to theatres more than 40 years ago. The archivists deserve a hearty thanks from all movie fans concerned with preserving America's classic cinema heritage for future generations to enjoy.

This boxed set includes a facinating feature on what it took to restore the films. Well worth watching, it's wonderful that it's included.

Atmospherically, "The Hound of the Baskervilles" is arguably the best of the 14 Holmes films, and the only one based specifically on a Conan Doyle story. It, and "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes," are the only two "period" films in the series and run longer, the remainder taking place in then modern-day England and America of the late 30s and early 40s and run about 90 minutes each.

Because the "regular" series was made during World War II, there are many references to it, as well as some facinating patriotic drum beating on the part of Holmes that concludes many of the films.

In both "Hound" and "Adventures," Holmes dons his deerstalker cap, popularized by original Strand Magazine illustrator Sidney Paget who made the image synonymous with the great detective. It is interesting to note that in the first of the non-period films in the series, Holmes reaches for his handy deerstalker, but is stopped by Watson. "Holmes," Watson said, "you promised." Leaving the deerstalker on the peg, Holmes grabs a "modern" hat instead.

Rathbone is especially sharp in "Hound of the Baskervilles," and is partnered by Bruce, who plays a bumbling Watson throughout the 14 films that was not Conan Doyle's vision of the great sleuth's biographical "Boswell." Nonetheless, the pairing is hugely entertaining and satisfying.

The creation of the moor, the sinister grimpen mire and truly terrifying hound remains fantastic and does much to engender this story as one of Conan Doyle's most popular with modern-day
readers and viewers alike.

The final scene represents the only reference any of the 14 films made to Holmes' "seven-percent" cocaine habit as Rathbone asks Bruce to retrieve "the needle." The scene, criticized as too risque by 1939 audiences, caused the film's producers to make a conscious decision to omit any additional mention of Holmes' recreational drug use in future outings.

All of the films are really enjoyable and bear up wonderfully well under repeat viewings. For me, two of the best films of the "regular" series are The Scarlet Claw, where a village believes the supernatural is at work killing people, and Sherlock Holmes Faces Death, where Holmes must solve the riddle of the Musgrave Ritual.

Not matter your age, these films deliver hours of enjoyment, and thanks to the UCLA Theater Archives and MPI, will for generations to come. I only wish that Rathbone and Bruce had lived to see their great work released to new audiences in this pristine DVD condition.
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271 of 278 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 14 Rathbone-Bruce flicks complete on 5 excellent 5-star DVDs but in clumsy 1-star box, July 22, 2006
This review is from: The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection (DVD)
Philip St. John Basil Rathbone (13 June 1892, Johannesburg--21 July 1967, New York) and William Nigel Bruce (4 Sep. 1895, Ensenada--8 Oct 1953, Santa Monica) starred in 14 Sherlock-Holmes films as, respectively, Holmes and Watson. The first two films (1939) are period pieces whereas the last 12 (1942-46) are contemporary ("modern").

"The complete Sherlock Holmes collection" is a 6/06 reissue on 5 DVDs of a 14-DVD set (in 5 boxes) previously issued by MPI 10/03-4/04. The reissues by MPI, which involve restorations of the 1942-46 films, have been critically acclaimed. This review thus just compares the 2006 and 2003-04 sets of reissues (this review also supplements the previous two reviews by R. Smith, 7/18, and E. Hornaday, 4/10):

OVERVIEW: 2006 reissue = 14 films on 5 DVDs (see below for track listing) in 1 box 1 1/4" wide VERSUS 2003-04 reissue = 14 films on 14 DVDs in 5 boxes totaling 4 3/8" wide.

DVD CONTENT: Same in both reissues except the 2006 box set has for "Dressed to kill" an added (i.e., unfortunately, not on the earlier issues) commentary by actress Patricia Morison and Holmes scholars David Gregory and Richard Valley.

BOOKLET/INSERT AND TEXT CONTENT: The 2006 box set has 2 pages of text besides the front cover. The 2003-04 reissues have 5 booklets ("production notes") written by Richard Valley, 8 pages each for "Hound" and "Adventures," 16 pages each for volumes 1-3. Although there is some overlap material, these 64 pages have many pictures and have much information on the 14 films, including cast listings.

SUMMARY OF PROS AND CONS OF 2006 BOX SET:

PROS: (1) much less expensive--$129.99 list ($119.99 Amazon in 7/06) versus $249.90 list ($224.95 Amazon in 7/06); (2) takes about 3" less shelf space; (3) more convenient to shuffle only 5 DVDs than 14; (4) added commentary for "Dressed to kill."

CONS: (1) no booklet insert and thus almost no information on the films included--a major deficiency; (2) appearance rather stark, with only 1 picture of Rathbone on the box (a pic of Bruce should also have been included); (3) flimsy cardboard case with 5 slim clear plastic DVD holders that fold out clumsily with the aid of a cloth puller and that are awkwardly hinged with only cellophane tape (and thus becoming easily unhinged, that is, DVD trays 1-4 separating from tray 5).

TRACK LISTING (dates from IMDb, times by reviewer):

DVD #1:
Introduction by restorer Robert Gitt (2003)--TT0:4:38
(film 1) The hound of the Baskervilles (Mar. 1939)--TT1:19:38 (13 scenes), with commentary by David Stuart Davies
(film 2) The adventures of Sherlock Holmes (Sep. 1939)--TT1:21:37 (13 scenes), with commentary by Richard Valley
(film 3) Sherlock Holmes and the voice of terror (Sep. 1942)--TT1:05:17 + 12-second war-bond trailer (11 scenes)

DVD #2:
(film 4) Sherlock Holmes and the secret weapon (Jan. 1943)--TT1:08:23 + 12-second war-bond trailer (12 scenes)
(film 5) Sherlock Holmes in Washington (Apr. 1943)--TT1:11:20 + 12-second war-bond trailer (13 scenes)
(film 6) Sherlock Holmes faces death (Sep. 1943)--TT1:07:54 + 12-second war-bond trailer (12 scenes), with commentary by David Stuart Davies

DVD #3:
(film 7) Sherlock Holmes and the spider woman (Jan. 1944)--TT1:02:00 + 12-second war-bond trailer (12 scenes)
(film 8) The scarlet claw (May 1944)--TT1:13:48, but no war-bond trailer (11 scenes), with commentary by David Stuart Davies
(film 9) The pearl of death (Aug. 1944)--TT1:08:29 + 12-second war-bond trailer (12 scenes)

Note: From "The scarlet claw" onward "Sherlock Holmes" was dropped from the titles to appeal to a wider audience.

DVD #4:
(film 10) The house of fear (Mar. 1945)--TT1:09:06, but no war-bond trailer (14 scenes)
(film 11) The woman in green (June 1945)--TT1:07:32 + 12-second war-bond trailer (12 scenes), with commentary by David Stuart Davies
(film 12) Pursuit to Algiers (Oct. 1945)--TT1:05:05 (12 scenes)

DVD #5:
(film 13) Terror by night (Feb. 1946)--TT0:59:40 (13 scenes)
(film 14) Dressed to kill (May 1946)--TT1:11:50 (13 scenes), with commentary by actress Patricia Morison and Holmes scholars David Gregory and Richard Valley
Additional bonus material:
(a) Photo galleries 1-5 (each TT0:2:35 with same musical background): gallery 1 = of Hound; gallery 2 = of Adventures; galleries 3-5 = of films 3-6, 7-10, 11-14, respectively
(b) Theatrical trailers (6, not restored--for films 7-10, 13, 14--TT0:7:05)
(c) Footage of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle--TT0:1:15. Note: This is from a summer 1927 Movietone film of Conan Doyle (1859-1930) and is much abbreviated. The film is TT0:11:45 on the 2001 DVD of "Terror by night" by Focus Films.

FINAL COMMENT: The 2006 box set crams 3 films on one DVD (e.g., DVD #1 with 232 min.). Some compression may be involved, but film quality seems equal to the 2003-04 issues with only one film per DVD.
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249 of 281 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Fun films, but TERRIBLE package..., September 5, 2006
This review is from: The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection (DVD)
I always thought these DVDs were greatly overpriced, no matter what the format, but when I found the set for $79.99 at a warehouse retailer, I finally succumbed. Even at that price, these are STILL overpriced. The box is rubbish, the plastic cases secured by one thin piece of tape that disengaged as soon as I opened the box. No booklet of chapters, nothing except a self-congratulatory essay about the restoration. And HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES does indeed freeze up at about 1:08 on one machine, and freezes but then keeps playing on another. Unforgivable. Extremely shabby treatment of classic films. One star is pretty rough, but I'm sick to death of nickel-plated packages being priced like gold. When Warner puts out box after box of brilliantly reissued and well packaged classic films at less than half the cost of this on-the-cheap package, it's time to complain, and loudly. Note: I'm not criticising the films; I'm criticising the packaging and the price.
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97 of 108 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars The HOUND Limps! Ridiculous!!, September 6, 2006
This review is from: The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection (DVD)
Of course I'm talking one star for this release, NOT the classic films -- five stars there. But same as other reviewers, my set froze on THREE different DVD players at the exact same spot on HOUND. There is no doubt in my mind that every set issued has this problem, though some rare players seem to be able to process it. What is so ridiculous is that nobody caught this in quality control!!! Are you kidding? Look at what this has cost the manufacturer and vendors by now. I returned mine (to another, lower priced seller) and got a full refund, but only after they paid shipping to and fro for another set (with the same exact problem). All this because nobody believed quality control was important. Again, HOLMES fans here -- so you have to be joking if you think they will put up with such obscene flaws. As well, I totally agree with some others that the price is absurdly high -- way too much money compared to comparable sets. And though the book style package is visually pretty neat, the quality is an embarrassment to say the least. The piece of tape hinge was a really, REALLY stupid idea -- cheap and insulting to classic film fans -- especially at this price level. And where is the booklet?? Where are the all the extras that OZ got for example?? Well, at least give us a few token features here for this rather large investment! I'm not going to touch this set until it all gets fixed -- and the price subsides tremendously. What a disappointment to fans -- Basil must be rolling over in his grave.
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32 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Set, but a CAUTION to buyers - defective disc, August 1, 2006
This review is from: The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection (DVD)
this is a great set for any Basil Rathbone/Sherlock Holmes fan - HOWEVER - on the first disc, the first movie (Hound of the Baskervilles) freezes up when it hits around the 1:08 mark of the movie. You either have to fast forward or jump to the next scene to bypass it. I tried playing it on 2 different dvd players as well as on my computer dvd. Amazon was nice and prompt at sending me a replacement set, but the replacement set did the exact same thing; froze at the same mark. I sent the replacement set back and was told by Amazon that the problem is greater than they had thought, and wouldn't be sending any more replacements. They did offer a refund if I returned the whole set, so it doesn't give too much of an option. Either keep the whole set with the defective disc, or return all of them and buy them all individually. I wasn't offered a discount for the damaged product.
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31 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful films....Poor Product, August 3, 2006
This review is from: The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection (DVD)
I purchased this disc set from a local retailer. Disc two had a smeared title label that was almost unreadable...perhaps a coincidence but the second film on the disc would freeze.On returning the item I was given only a store credit since the store had no other copies to sell.I should have bought from Amazon! I don't like the silly plastic holders which came loose from the cardboard box after a few openings. Set is too pricey for this sloppy work from MPI.The films are wonderful...I'll wait until they fix this mess.
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29 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars At last! The complete Rathbone/Holmes in one box., November 8, 2006
By 
R. C. Walker "catu11us" (Encinitas CA, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection (DVD)
Basil Rathbone reigned for 50 years as the very embodiment of Sherlock Holmes. The script writers were very fond of having him say "Elementary, my dear Watson", a phrase he never uttered in Doyle's original works. In any event, Rathbone has been dethroned definitively by Jeremy Brett. Nonetheless, the 14 Holmes films he made are a celluloid treasure that demands to be preserved.

Luckily, restorations carried out at UCLA have brought us 12 of these films in virtually pristine condition. The other 2 (the first of the series, including the estimable "Hound of the Baskervilles", are obviously also in very good shape. Rathbone is of course a marvelous physical presentation of Holmes - as Brett would be later. The latter did a better job of bringing out Holmes' eccentricities. In these films, Nigel Bruce is cast as a bumbling, almost doddering Dr. Watson, a characterization markedly at odds with Doyle's. He plays this role with commendable sincerity.

The films are spread out, 3 (or 2) to a disc, over 5 DVDs. Despite the awkwardness of the storage box, the presentation is otherwise quite good. There are useful commentaries attached to some of the films and all the films have subtitles available. Alas, the latter are done by someone whose literacy is somewhat challenged, and they exhibit more than the usual number of howlers. A good number of obvious (but not common) words and names are very badly misspelled, sometimes to the extent that the meaning of the dialogue is mangled. The prints are invariably crisp and clean, the sound clear. We may also be supremely grateful that Rathbone isn't saddled with the silly "deerstalker" one often seems on other actors but not on Doyle's Holmes (nor on Brett's).

Most usefully, the films are presented in the order in which they were made. The first 2, "Hound of the Baskervilles" and "Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" (both from 1939), are properly set in Victorian times. When the series resumed in 1942 with "The Voice of Terror", World War II was in full swing. It was only to be expected that the setting would be moved to the 1940s and the plots should relate to the war. This feature became less prominent as things turned against the Nazi thugs. In fact, of course, although Holmes didn't die until 1957, he did very little during the war, coming out of retirement only in extremis. (See Baring-Gould's biography of the great detective.)

None of the films features a Doyle story as written, but some are "based" on works by Doyle. The perils (in terms of quality) of modernizing, updating, and rewriting the works of the original author can readily be seen by comparing the more scrupulously faithful versions in which Jeremy Brett appeared. However, Rathbone carries the ball magnificently and gives these bastardized versions more gravitas than they probably deserve.

Probably the worst feature of the rewriting process is (as mentioned) the rôle of Dr. John Watson. In these films, Nigel Bruce plays not only Holmes' foil, but the great detective's fool. The writers go out of their way to portray Watson as gullible, bumbling, vain, and foolish. This is entirely at odds with Doyle's portrayal. Not that Watson is a paragon of brilliance, but he is a fine doctor, brave, resourceful, and in every way a partner in Holmes' endeavors. The filmwriters' clumsy attempts at comic relief are entirely demeaning - not only to Watson but to Bruce as well. Nevertheless, to his great credit, the veteran actor bumbles bravely through 14 scripts.

Toward the end of the series of films - say, the last 5 (1945-46) - the dramatic impulse of the scripts weakens and we're faced with things like the potboiling "Woman in Green". An exception is "Pursuit to Algiers", which is a rather taut little thriller more like the earlier efforts. (Which, as a bonus, offers a neat game of "spot the king" ... fun, if fairly easy.)

On the whole, I recommend this set. Especially at Amazon's usual used prices, this set will be significantly cheaper than the same films purchased separately. And the packaging - however awkward - is a great improvement over 14 separate cases.
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28 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Elementary, my dear Watson, February 17, 2007
This review is from: The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection (DVD)
There have been only two long-running Sherlock Holmes actors who were really memorable: Jeremy Brett, and Basil Rathbone. And Rathbone is showcased at his best in "The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection," which collects all the excellent Sherlock movies (although the ones not cased on Arthur Conan Doyle's stories aren't quite as solid).

It opens with "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes," which introduces us to the main characters. Sherlock Holmes (Rathbone) arrives at the courthouse a minute too late, and angrily watches his nemesis Professor Moriarty (George Zucco) go free because of a lack of evidence.

Sick of Holmes' investigations, Moriarty decides to utterly ruin Holmes with the most dastardly crime ever -- by distracting him with a bizarre threat to a young woman. Holmes becomes wrapped up in the potential murder, as the stressed-out police try to get him to pay attention to a threat to the Crown Jewels.

And after that, Holmes and his pal Watson (Nigel Bruce) solve all sorts of mysteries -- a string of bloody murders in a Canadian village, the theft of music-boxes, a stolen diamond on a train, the Hound of the Baskervilles on a lonely estate, World War II spies and kidnappings, a cursed pearl, the suicides of gamblers, castle murders, and a bizarre serial killing where the fingers are being removed.

Some of these Holmes movies are based on Doyle stories, and some aren't. Unsurprisingly, the ones that are based on Doyle stories ("Hound of the Baskervilles") tend to be a bit stronger than the ones that aren't ("Dressed to Kill"), and it's a little weird to see Holmes and Watson doing their patriotic duty in... World War II? Okay, whatever.

But even the least of these stories are enjoyable mysteries, usually with some convenient crimes for Holmes to solve, whether it's a straightforward mystery or a Agatha-Christie-style whodunnit. The sometimes gruesome crimes are softened with some fun comedy like Holmes as a gaucho, or Watson getting drunk.

The settings are colourful and varied -- misty forests and moors, trains, castles -- and the stories are fast-paced and energetic, even when there's been a murder or theft. But the filmmakers didn't cut out the creepier moments as well, such as the grimpen mire of "Hound of the Baskervilles," or the Musgrave ritual story.

Rathbone's Holmes is the cerebral side of the Great Detective -- cool and slightly languid, as if he's always lying back to ponder the mystery, but he shows a warm side when confronted with a victim. He even fits Doyle's descriptions of Holmes -- tall, skinny, big nose. Nigel Bruce does a good enough job, but the portrayal of Watson is seriously flawed. He's basically literate comic relief.

"The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection" has a few weak links, but even the weakest is entertaining and suspenseful, with excellent acting by Rathbone and Bruce. Definitely worth getting.
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27 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's a Mystery! In fact, it's 14 Mysteries!, January 21, 2007
This review is from: The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection (DVD)
In literature, there are certain characters that are not only immortal but iconic. Along with such figures as Dracula, Tarzan and Frankenstein, there is Sherlock Holmes. All of these characters have been depicted in films many times. Sometimes, the depiction on the screen is so good, it is definitive; you can't think of the character without thinking of the actor. Karloff's version of Frankenstein's monster is one such version. With Sherlock Holmes, the definitive version is that of Basil Rathbone. There will be debates as to whether he was the best or not, but in the popular mind, when one thinks of Holmes, it is Rathbone that is pictured (and to a lesser extent, Dr. Watson is linked with Nigel Bruce).

The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection includes all fourteen Rathbone and Bruce movies. In the days before television, movies often came out in series, and the Sherlock Holmes series is one such example. Unlike nowadays, when we usually wait a week between episodes of a show, viewers in the early 1940s waited a few months, but in a sense, these movies are a precursor to the television mystery series. Even the opening credits are the same in each movie (after the first couple).

I tend to divide the movies into three eras. The first two movies - The Hound of the Baskervilles and Adventures of Sherlock Holmes were made by 20th Century Fox and take place in Arthur Conan Doyle's Victorian England. This pair is often considered among the best in the entire series. Adventures features the first of three appearances of Professor Moriarty, this time out to steal the Crown Jewels. Hound, the first in the series, has the only real reference to Holmes's drug addiction with a rather cryptic line at the very end.

After Fox stopped producing the movies, Universal Pictures took over and changed the direction of the films as well as the time frame: the movies now took place in contemporary (1940s) England. In the second era, Holmes joined the war effort and rooted out spies. These movies include Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror, Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon (the second Moriarty film) and Sherlock Holmes in Washington. It was during this era that another vital element of the series was brought in, namely Roy William Neill, who would produce and direct almost all the Universal films. The war films were not as popular as it took Holmes out of his milieu; after these three films, the war references would decline considerably and eventually disappear.

Sherlock Holmes Faces Death is a transitional film between the second and third eras. Although still in "modern" times, it gets back to the classic mystery style. Faces Death still has a lot of war references (it takes place in a house where wounded veterans are recuperating and has one of Holmes's patriotic messages at the end). After that, the final era kicks into full stride with the best titles in the series: The Spider Woman, The Scarlet Claw, The Pearl of Death, The House of Fear, The Woman in Green (the last Moriarty film), Pursuit to Algiers, Terror By Night and Dressed to Kill. I actually feel that the two movies that bookend this sequence feature the best villains, in both cases women who often match wits with Holmes in a manner that even Moriarty should envy.

Continuity between films is not considered important; for example, Moriarty keeps coming back to life after dying in earlier movies. Nonetheless, there are clever little bits that do recur; for example, in Faces Death, Holmes fires some bullets into a wall in his home; these bullet holes remain to the very end and are clearly seen in Dressed to Kill. Certain characters recur, most notably the buffoonish Scotland Yard detective Lestrade and the landlady Mrs. Hudson, while other actors play different roles in different movies.

These were definitely B movies, shot with a limited budget; sets were reused and footage taken from other movies (for example, the train sabotage sequence in Voice of Terror is clearly taken from The Invisible Man). There are plot holes galore, but each movie is nonetheless a pleasure to watch and at only around 70 minutes each, they don't drag at all. With six commentaries (on Hound, Adventures, Faces Death, Scarlet Claw, Woman in Green and Dressed to Kill), a photo gallery, a few trailers and a brief documentary on the restoration of the 12 Universal films, this is an excellent collection. My only quibble is with the box itself, which looks nice but was beginning to fall apart by the end of my viewing; this, however, is not enough to deter me from giving this set the full five stars it well deserves.
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant, May 13, 2007
By 
This review is from: The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection (DVD)
This is a marvellous set of all 14 films that Rathbone and Bruce made together.

The remastering is excellent and the difference is quite dramtic compared with some other versions of the same films that I have. Recently I made a direct comparison between the two versions of "Terror By Night" and the improvement is dramatic.

As previous reviewers have said Rathbone and Bruce work very well together and Dr Watson has some wonderfully funny lines, which if not Conan Doyles original lines, still work very well nevertheless. Some of the acting is occasionally a bit wooden, and sometimes the plots are a bit contrived (again I don't think this is Conan Doyles fault) but even so these are classic films regardless.

This set makes all previous boxed sets of Rathbone and Bruce (of which I own one) completely redundant. Buy this one!!
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