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From: "Evelyn C. Leeper" <evelynchimelisleeper@gmail.com>
Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.fandom
Subject: MT VOID, 07/19/24 -- Vol. 43, No. 3, Whole Number 2337
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THE MT VOID
07/19/24 -- Vol. 43, No. 3, Whole Number 2337

Co-Editor: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
Co-Editor: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
Sending Address: evelynchimelisleeper@gmail.com
All material is the opinion of the author and is copyrighted by
the
author unless otherwise noted.
All comments sent or posted will be assumed authorized for
inclusion unless otherwise noted.

To subscribe or unsubscribe, send mail to eleeper@optonline.net
The latest issue is at <http://www.leepers.us/mtvoid/latest.htm>.
An index with links to the issues of the MT VOID since 1986 is at
<http://leepers.us/mtvoid/back_issues.htm>.

Topics:
         THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES (Part 2) (film comments
                 by Evelyn C. Leeper)
         THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES (letter of comment
                 by Scott Dorsey)
         This Week's Reading (THE MAD EMPEROR: HELIOGABALUS
                 AND THE DECADENCE OF ROME) (book comments
                 by Evelyn C. Leeper)

===================================================================

TOPIC: THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES  (Part 2) (film comments by
Evelyn C. Leeper)

Here is part 2 of my comments on various film and television
versions of THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES:


In the 1968 BBC two-part television version of THE HOUND OF THE
BASKERVILLES, Cushing reprises his role as Holmes, with Nigel
Stock as Watson.  Holmes is less abrupt with Watson here, but
Watson is a bit blander than in the Hammer version.  In both,
however, Watson has shed the buffoonery of Nigel Bruce's
portrayal, and a good thing it is too.

The story itself sticks reasonably close to the original, as do
most BBC adaptations (at least those I have seen).  Perhaps this
is because the BBC was not concerned with luring people into
theaters the way Hammer Films was.


THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES (1982) has Tom Baker as Holmes.  His
facial structure seems wrong for Holmes, and his long stint as The
Doctor in "Doctor Who" makes it difficult to see him as anyone
else. (This was Basil Rathbone's problem in reverse.)  I also
thought Nicholas Woodeson was miscast as Sir Henry
Baskerville--not that his performance was bad, but I had
envisioned Baskerville as being a tall man, and Woodeson, at 5'4"
is considerably shorter than Holmes and even than Watson.  Maybe I
have been spoiled by Christopher Lee as Baskerville.

The back story of the hound is told with short nighttime scenes,
with no sound other than Mortimer telling the story.  This
certainly helped the production save money.


THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES (1988) has Jeremy Brett as Holmes,
and is part of the Granada Television series of 41 episodes
encompassing 43 stories (two of the episodes merged two stories in
each of them).  The first twenty episodes of the series are
considered some of the definitive portrayals of Holmes on screen.
But Brett's health problems had him start taking lithium pills,
which caused both fluid retention and lethargy.  The unfortunate
result is that in the remaining episodes (this one was number 26),
his face is puffy, and his performance a bit less energetic.  He
also had heart troubles and difficulty breathing.  He insisted on
continuing, saying, "The show must go on," but it must be
acknowledged that the later performances are not up to the earlier
ones.

This version is fairly faithful to the original, given the
necessary condensation to fit a 100-minute slot.  Mortimer gets
bit more time than in the book, there is a bit of justification in
saying Selden is no longer a danger, and so on.  The problem is
that the whole production is not very exciting.


THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES (2001) has Matt Frewer as a truly
annoying Holmes--even more annoying then Doyle made him.  The
credits claim it is based on the "novella" by Doyle--when did it
become a novella rather than a novel?  And something not revealed
in the novel until a ways in (the circumstances of Sir Charles's
death) is shown even before the credits.  Also, the discussion
about Selden occurs almost immediately after the discovery of
Barrymore's signaling, and the film also makes Selden (apparently)
innocent but tricked into a false confession.  To top it off, the
ending is totally changed.

Label this Hallmark Channel version a revisionist version, and
feel free to skip it.


THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES (2002) was shown on PBS's
"Masterpiece Theatre" and its introduction credited Bertram
Fletcher Robinson as a major contributor to the story, something
other films did not.  (In fact, Robinson received a third of the
royalties from the Strand publication of the novel.)  Richard
Roxburgh stars as Holmes, Ian Hart as Watson, and Richard E. Grant
as Stapleton.  Unfortunately, for me Grant tends to exude a sly,
menacing aspect, possibly due to my knowing him in his role in THE
MOUNTAINS OF THE MOON, and that somewhat gives away one of the
surprises in the story.  (Then again, it was made for the
hundredth anniversary of the book, so it may be assumed most
viewers knew the story anyway.)  And Roxburgh does not look like
Holmes at all.

There are a lot of changes to the story: a seance and a Christmas
ball are added, as well as a different backstory for Selden and an
encounter between him and Sir Henry.  (It seems everyone wants to
tweak the Selden plotline.)  A lot of the explanation of final
sequence is changed or left out entirely as well.


I am not including SHERLOCK: THE HOUNDS OF BASKERVILLE (2011) in
this article because while it is inspired by the novel THE HOUND
OF THE BASKERVILLES, it is not an adaptation of it.  [-ecl]

===================================================================

TOPIC: THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES (letter of comment by Scott
Dorsey)

In response to Evelyn's comments on film adaptations of THE HOUND
OF THE BASKERVILLES in the 07/12/24 issue of the MT VOID, Scott
Dorsey writes:

What about musical adaptations such as my personal favorite below?

<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ac-0NzF1SyA>

[-sd]

===================================================================

TOPIC: This Week's Reading (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

Okay, two weeks ago I misspelled the names of two Roman emperors.
Last week it was the editor of KEN BURNS'S THE CIVIL WAR:
HISTORIANS RESPOND, who is Robert Brent *Toplin*, not Robert Brent
*Topin*.

Two weeks ago I wrote that Elagabalus was "a colorful dumpster
fire of an emperor", so I was pleased to find THE MAD EMPEROR:
HELIOGABALUS AND THE DECADENCE OF ROME by Harry Sidebottom
(Oneworld, ISBN 978-0-86154-253-6) available through inter-library
loan.  While it is not really fair to call the book "a colorful
dumpster fire of a biography,' it is colorful, and it is a
dumpster fire in the sense that it cannot decide whether it is an
academic work or a work aimed at the non-academic reader, one
which repeats all the scandalous part only often to say "but this
is probably not true.".

The academic aspect of the book is seen in its interminable
introductions of names along with their official positions (in
both Latin and English, and occasionally in Greek), as well as
references to the three major historians writing about the time:
Cassius Dio, Herodian, and the "Historia Augusta".  The first two
are fairly straightforward and respectable; the "Historia Augusta"
seems to be an ancient version of HOLLYWOOD BABYLON, a book by
Kenneth Anger, full of many stories about Hollywood, highly
salacious and entirely unsupported by any hard evidence.

(I personally found it off-putting that Sidebottom chooses to
refer to Julia Domna and Julia Maesa as just "Domna" and "Maesa",
since every other source I am familiar call them by the fuller
names.)

The "Historia Augusta" purported to be the works of six authors;
modern scholars pretty much agree that there was only a single
author.  And that author seemed to want to collect the most
outrageous stories about all their subjects (all the emperors from
117 to 284 (Hadrian to Carinus and Numerian).  (However, there are
gaps presumably due to lost manuscripts.)

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