Sherlock Holmes and The Secret Weapon (1943) [Thriller]



Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon (1943) is the fourth in the Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce series of Sherlock Holmes films.

Sherlock Holmes (Basil Rathbone) pretends to be a Nazi spy to aid scientist Dr. Franz Tobel (William Post Jr.) and his new invention, a bombsight, in escaping a Gestapo trap in Switzerland. Holmes and Franz fly to London, where Holmes places him under the protection of his friend, Dr. Watson (Nigel Bruce). The scientist slips away against Holmes’ instructions for a secret reunion with his fiancee, Charlotte Eberli (Kaaren Verne), and gives her an envelope containing a coded message. He tells Charlotte to give it to Holmes if anything should happen to him. Leaving Charlotte’s apartment, an attempt to abduct him by German spies is foiled by a passing London bobby.

Tobel successfully demonstrates the bombsight for Sir Reginald Bailey (Holmes Herbert) and observers from Bomber Command. Tobel, now under the protection of Inspector Lestrade (Dennis Hoey) and Scotland Yard, tells Sir Reginald that, although willing to provide the British with his bombsight, only he will know its secret and has a complex plan for its manufacture to keep the secret safe. He separates his invention into four parts and gives one to each of four Swiss scientists, known only to him, to construct separately. Soon after, Holmes receives a call from Lestrade telling him that Tobel has disappeared. Holmes goes to Charlotte’s apartment, where he receives the Tobel’s envelope. Rather than the coded message, the message inside is from Holmes’ nemesis, master criminal Professor Moriarty (Lionel Atwill).

Disguising himself as Ram Singh, one of Moriarty’s old henchmen, Holmes searches the Soho district for information. He encounters two henchmen, but is captured by Moriarty. Holmes is put into the false bottom of a sea chest, but is rescued when Watson and Lestrade observe the henchmen struggling with its unusual weight. Holmes returns to Charlotte’s apartment to search for clues to the message’s contents. He finds impressions of the message left on a notepad page by immersing it in “fluorescent salts… and then photograph(ing) it by ultraviolet light.” Holmes breaks the first three lines of a cunningly modified alphabet substitution code, which are the identities and locations of three of the scientists, but unable to break the fourth line, which has been altered as an added precaution, soon learns that Moriarty has murdered all three and stolen their parts. Meanwhile, Moriarty, also unable to break the fourth line, tortures Tobel for the name of the fourth scientist. Holmes deduces the change in the code and breaks the fourth line, identifying the scientist as Professor Frederick Hoffner (Henry Victor).

Moriarty accidentally deciphers the code. He sends agents to abduct Hoffner, who has the brilliance to put the four parts together should Tobel not recover from torture. The German agents bring the scientist, who is actually Holmes in disguise again, to Moriarty’s seemingly undetectable stronghold. Unknown to Moriarty, Holmes had the real Hoffner attach an apparatus to their car that drips luminous paint (which Watson helped prepare) at regular intervals. Holmes uses Moriarty’s vanity and pride to trick him into slowly bleeding Holmes to death “drop by drop”, to stall for time. Holmes is saved at the last minute, however, by Watson and Lestrade, who with Hoffner’s help, successfully followed the drops. Scotland Yard apprehends the spies, but Moriarty escapes. When he attempts to complete his escape through a secret passageway, he falls sixty feet to his death; Holmes has discovered the criminal’s hidden trap door and left it open.

This is the second Basil Rathbone “Sherlock Holmes” film in which Moriarty dies. He is thrown to his death from the top of the Tower of London by Holmes in 1939’s The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. During the course of the adventure, Holmes adopts the disguises of an elderly German bookseller (taken from the Arthur Conan Doyle story The Adventure of the Empty House), the lascar sailor Ram Singh, and the Swiss scientist Professor Hoffner. His disguise as the bookseller was parodied in the film The Pink Panther. The film is a loose adaptation of The Adventure of the Dancing Men; while credited as an adaptation, the only content which bears similarity is the “dancing men” code.

Directed by Roy William Neil, produced by Howard Benedict, written by W. Scott Darling, based on “The Adventure of the Dancing Men” by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, starring Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes, Nigel Bruce as Dr. Watson, Lionel Atwill as Professor Moriarty, music by Frank Skinner.

Source: “Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon” Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.. 21 June 2012. Web. 1 July 2012. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sherlock_Holmes_and_the_Secret_Weapon.

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24 Replies to “Sherlock Holmes and The Secret Weapon (1943) [Thriller]”

  1. Great movie! Odd to see this after watching 'Son of Frankenstein', though, where Atwill played the cop (Inspector Krogh) and Rathbone played the bad or rather seriously misguided Doctor Frankenstein.

  2. I'll tell you all right I will—the truth and that's a fact.  The blighter's in Davy Jones' locker a feeding the fishes, he is, deader than a blinking mackerel.  Now, ain't that worth a fiver?  Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha!

    This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England.

  3. George Zucco was better fit for the role of Professor Moriarty, than Lionell Atwill and Henry Daniell in The Woman in Green.  Zucco played Moriarty in "Adventures of Sherlock Holmes.  Atwill was better as Dr. Mortimer in 1939 Hound of the Baskervilles. Zucco and Daniel were also crooks in Sherlock Holmes in Washington.

  4. Classic, Holmes vs. Moriarity
    Holmes, 'I neglected to warn him, it seems some careless person came across his trap doo-or, and left it open.' He, he

  5. Of all the Sherlock Holmes movies, this one is the most illogical.
    1) The doctor already demonstrated the bomb sight to the military. All they need now to do is to manufacture them. Why would he then divide the bomb sight up into 4 pieces and give them to other scientists to make? That is not logical.
    2) They are scientists, not manufacturers of bomb sights. Scientists make prototypes for others to manufacture mass quantities of those prototypes.
    3) Even if the 4 scientists did manufacture the bomb sight, at some point they all would have to be brought together to be assembled. How was that going to happen when the scientists were not known to one another?
    4) And finally, when the Germans had the doctor in custody, why question him about who the fourth scientist was? Just take him back to Germany as he is the one who created the bomb sight. It doesn't make any difference to the Germans who the fourth scientist is at that stage, they have the inventor!
    Any disagreements?

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