Tropedia

All unique and most-recently-edited pages, images and templates from Original Tropes and The True Tropes wikis have been copied to this wiki. The two source wikis have been redirected to this wiki. Please see the FAQ on the merge for more.

READ MORE

Tropedia
Farm-Fresh balanceYMMVTransmit blueRadarWikEd fancyquotesQuotes • (Emoticon happyFunnyHeartHeartwarmingSilk award star gold 3Awesome) • RefridgeratorFridgeGroupCharactersScript editFanfic RecsSkull0Nightmare FuelRsz 1rsz 2rsz 1shout-out iconShout OutMagnifierPlotGota iconoTear JerkerBug-silkHeadscratchersHelpTriviaWMGFilmRoll-smallRecapRainbowHo YayPhoto linkImage LinksNyan-Cat-OriginalMemesHaiku-wide-iconHaikuLaconicLibrary science symbol SourceSetting
81FsrkCOmRL

A 1985 mystery/adventure film directed by Barry Levinson, produced by Steven Spielberg and written by Chris Columbus, it was based on characters by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. The movie depicts a young Sherlock Holmes (Nicholas Rowe) and John Watson (Alan Cox) meeting and solving a mystery together at a Boarding School with the help of a local retired professor's cute niece, Elizabeth Hardy (Sophie Ward)

It was the first film produced by Amblin Entertainment to receive a PG-13 rating. The film is notable for including the first fully computer-generated character, a knight composed of elements from a stained glass window. The effect was created by Lucasfilm's John Lasseter, who is now chief creative officer at Pixar Animation Studios and Walt Disney Animation Studios. The SFX earned the film an Academy Award nomination, and was beaten by Cocoon.

Tropes used in Young Sherlock Holmes include:


This film is an example of:[]

  • Already Met Everyone
  • Bittersweet Ending: The two heroes win the day, but Elizabeth dies in an Heroic Sacrifice.
  • Blow Gun: An assassin uses a blowgun to shoot darts tipped with a hallucinogenic drug.
  • Boarding School
  • Dawson Casting: Nicholas Rowe, who plays Sherlock Holmes, is several years older than most of the other actors playing students. This was probably intentional to give Holmes his necessary height and appearance of superior intellect.
  • Disney Villain Death: Rathe falls into a frozen river.
  • Everyone Went to School Together: Holmes and Watson go to school together. For more, see The Stinger.
  • Flanderization: This film does use the Flanderized version of Watson who's overweight and rather clueless, but it's somewhat Justified by him being a teen. Presumably he's got years (and his stint in the military) yet to grow into the more fit and savvy Watson the original was. (Plus he does get some details that Holmes did not at the very end.
  • Force Feeding: The sequence where John Watson hallucinates that his legs are bound with sausages and that pastries are trying to force him to eat them.
  • Freudian Excuse: For both Holmes' detective career (see Troubled Backstory Flashback) and being a bachelor (his first love dies).
    • Also for Rahte/Eh Tar/Moriarty: he and his sister were the Sole Survivors of the massacre of a whole Egyptian village.
  • Fright Deathtrap: The Run To Your Doom variety is used frequently, as several elder gentlemen who pissed off the wrong Egyptian cult as younger men are drugged with blow-darts, causing them to see terrifying hallucinations and run into traffic, leap out 3rd story windows, etc.
  • I'm Going for a Closer Look: While exploring the hidden temple.
  • Mind Rape: Of the "mundane" type.
  • Mushroom Samba: The peculiar way the victims are killed.
  • Mythology Gag: Plenty of them.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: When the gargoyle in the shop starts to animate, its eyes glow red.
  • Revenge: Eh Tar's motivation.
  • Sequel Hook: The Stinger reveals that one of the characters in the film would eventually become Professor Moriarty. Shame that there was no sequel (beyond the books, of course), because the flick wasn't that bad.
  • Sherlock Scan: A school-aged Watson transfers to a new boarding school and meets Holmes for the first time. Holmes deduces Watson's name, home county, father's occupation, and Watson's love of writing and pastries. He only gets Watson's name wrong (he guesses James instead of John) because he only saw "J. Watson" on Watson's luggage and decided to go with a common name starting with J (John would have been his second guess).
  • Sdrawkcab Name: Villain Eh Tar uses the alias of Professor Rathe for his cover job as Brompton Academy's fencing instructor. Watson even spells this out towards the end of the film as a "very important clue."
  • Spinoff Babies: A pastiche supposedly telling the early life of Holmes and Watson when they first met as teens — and apparently before Holmes figured out how to solve crimes by logical deduction.
  • Taking the Bullet: Elizabeth.
  • The Eyes Have It: The scene where the knight in the stained-glass window leaps down to do combat with the poor priest. Notable because it is specifically later revealed, like other deaths in the film, to be caused by a hallucinogenic drug. What the priest saw was in fact all in his mind, but since it made him flee the church and run under the wheels of a moving carriage, he still ended up just as dead.
  • The Jimmy Hart Version: The cultists performing a human sacrifice chant a song which rips off "O Fortuna" from Carmen Burana.
  • The Stinger: The end credits are played over a sleigh going through a snow-covered forest. As the credits end, someone gets out of the sleigh and checks into the hotel. We see him signing in under the name Moriarty. As the camera pans up, Moriarty is revealed to be Ehtar, the villain, who survived the fall into the river.
  • Those Magnificent Flying Machines
  • Troubled Backstory Flashback: Holmes' drugged hallucination starts out as one of these, with his father yelling at him while his mother weeps in the background. It's implied that Sherlock's snooping uncovered Holmes Sr.'s affair or other transgression, breaking his mother's heart and earning his father's wrath.
  • What If: The movie begins with a disclaimer explaining that it's a "What If" story.