
Which Holmes did it best?
SLOUGH, ENGLAND:
If anyone has mastered the art of writing prose dryer than a digestive biscuit, it is surely Arthur Conan Doyle. Almost ruthlessly purged of any semblance of wit, Doyle's Dr Watson lulls his readers to sleep, almost as if parading as a general anaesthetic, by giving a duller-than-dishwater account of his adventures with one of fiction's biggest detective hotshots, Sherlock Holmes.
The dullness of Doyle
If you have any doubts as to Watson's passion for spreading boredom far and wide, you are invited to study this riveting opening passage from A Study in Scarlet:
"In the year 1878 I took my degree of Doctor of Medicine of the University of London, and proceeded to Netley to go through the course prescribed for surgeons in the Army. Having completed my studies there, I was duly attached to the Fifth Northumberland Fusiliers as assistant surgeon. The regiment was stationed in India at the time, and before I could join it, the second Afghan war had broken out."
(For those of you who did not dose off after 'year', please dig out a copy of A Study in Scarlet in your own time and look up paragraph number 2 if you are still seeking a sleeping aid.)
Fortunately, however, we live in a world where those in the business of regaling us with film and television are immune to Doyle's dogged efforts to anaesthetise through words. No one who loves a good juicy murder will have ever complained of there being a dearth of Sherlock Holmes-oriented content on TV. As a tribute to these brave filmmakers and actors, let us take a closer look at three onscreen adaptations of Doyle's immortal (against all odds) literature.
'Watson' (2025)
Watson combines the two things that a certain echelon of TV viewers holds dear: murder and medicine. Set in present-day Pittsburgh in America, Dr John Watson runs a medical practice where he treats patients with strange and unidentifiable issues. One year ago, his dear friend Sherlock Holmes perished at the hands of his archnemesis, Moriarty, who was also supposed to have been finished off in the same fight. However, because every Moriarty in every fictional universe is like that pesky cockroach unperturbed by a nuclear holocaust, our latest Watson must face his past when undeniable evidence surfaces that Moriarty may, sadly, still be alive. Alongside this troubling factoid, Watson must also continue to treat his patients – although because his time with his beloved Holmes was not wasted, he uses his dear departed friend's deductive reasoning to get to the root cause of whatever rare disorders are ailing his patients.
As you will have deduced from this little summary, Watson is more of an upgraded version of House MD and has less to do with Holmes than almost any Holmes adaptations to date – a conclusion that has not escaped the unforgiving eye of your average IMDb reviewer.
"It is so much a rip-off of House MD that frankly, it gets embarrassing to watch. Even the music is exactly as in House. Oh, and Morris Chestnut is not the right guy to play any kind of smart doctor," writes one commenter. "It's not all bad, though. The writing and acting are not awful, the story moves along as it should... there is some potential, despite the bad decisions they made at conception."
"Not all bad" and "not awful" may not be quite the response that producer and series creator Craig Sweeny may have been aiming for, so whether or not Watson hangs around long enough to merit a second season remains to be seen. The odds look slim.
'Enola Holmes' (2020)
Set in the late 1800s and turning the spotlight on Sherlock's younger sister, Enola Homes is everything a modern Holmes film for kids (and like-minded adults) should be: fresh, engaging, not preachy, with a loveable female protagonist who grates on nobody's nerves.
After enjoying a free-spirited childhood, 16-year-old Enola Holmes is on the brink of being packed away to a boarding school for young ladies where she is to be taught things like manners. Determined to avoid this dreadful fate, and equally determined to hunt down her mother, who appears to have vanished of her own accord in the dead of night, Enola runs away from home and play super sleuth across London. This running away from home business is even easier than it sounds, for Enola is in the care of her aloof older brothers, who have little interest in either their missing mother or the whereabouts of their younger sister.
One of these brothers, of course, is Sherlock, played by the dashing Henry Cavill. Lovers of eye candy will have had their hopes dashed when they learn how pathetically little screen time Cavill gets. However, since this is really a coming-of-age story about Enola, Cavill's lack of screen presence is justified. Can Enola outwit her famous detective brother, find her mother, find young love, defeat a terrifying dowager and undo the changes that are about to set back the course of women's rights? You are a fool if you believe any of this is beyond our heroine's remit, and the joy lies in just how she does it.
'Sherlock' (2010-1017)
Because the best must always be saved for last, there is no escaping this definitive quirky version of Doyle's works. Sherlock does almost everything a book fan would abhor: it upgrades everything to the present day, defies canon by referring to its eponymous hero by his first name as opposed to his surname, and calls its first episode A Study in Pink rather than sticking to Doyle's appointed title A Study in Scarlet. As if this was not scandalous enough, it even turns a crucial plot point completely on its head when Sherlock et al examine the actual murder scene.
Fortunately, none of this matters, because series creators Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat were able to dust off the dry fluff littering Doyle's prose and get to the heart of his life's work. Without their peerless efforts, we would never have known the true ingenuity of London criminals, the richness of Sherlock's mind palace, and the bond between detective and sidekick that comes dangerously close to reducing to tears anyone who does not possess a heart of stone. Despite whatever viewers have to say about the final season (this is a Mentos-in-Coke situation, with opinions cleaving fans neatly in two), there is no denying that Benedict Cumberbatch and his dark curly hair filled a Sherlock-shaped hole in our lives we did not know we had.
Not only are we gifted a watertight script, a musical score that doubles as the aural equivalent of Sherlock's copious ego, camera work that scythes right to the point, and a flawless performance by both main and supporting cast, this is a gem that is unlikely to ever be superseded by any future Doyle adaptation. Not even Robert Downey Jr's Holmes in Elementary – much more faithful to Doyle's actual works – has a hope of coming close.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
1736750329-0%2FUntitled-design-(37)1736750329-0.png&w=3840&q=100)

Express Tribune
18-05-2025
- Express Tribune
Jesy Nelson welcomes twin daughters after emergency surgery for rare pregnancy complication
Jesy Nelson, former member of the British girl group Little Mix, has announced the premature birth of twin daughters with her partner, singer Zion Foster. The couple's daughters, Ocean Jade Nelson-Foster and Story Monroe Nelson-Foster, were born at 31 weeks and five days after Nelson underwent emergency surgery prompted by a rare condition known as twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS). Nelson shared the news in an emotional Instagram post, accompanied by the first photos of the newborns being held by her and Foster. She wrote, 'It all happened so quickly, but we are so blessed that they are here with us, healthy and fighting strong! We've never felt more in love.' While Nelson shared her joy on social media, Foster opened up about the challenges they faced during her hospital stay, which began in late March. Speaking to OK! Magazine, he said the experience brought them closer: 'It's at these times when you really know what love you have and what your relationship means. For me and Jess, this has just taken it to a whole other level.' The couple adapted to life in the hospital, with Foster converting a pull-out couch into a bed beside Nelson's. 'The nurses just said, 'Oh my God. It looks so nice in here. It looks so homely,'' he recalled. TTTS is a serious condition that can affect identical twins sharing a placenta. Abnormal blood vessel connections in the placenta lead to an uneven blood flow between twins—putting one at risk of dehydration and the other of cardiac issues. It occurs in about 10 to 15 percent of such pregnancies, according to Professor Asma Khalil of St George's Hospital, University of London. Now recovering at home, Nelson and Foster are hopeful and grateful, aiming to raise awareness of TTTS and encourage other parents facing complications to seek early support and medical advice.


Express Tribune
12-05-2025
- Express Tribune
Everything known about 'Watson' season 2: Schedule, returning cast, and story developments after season finale
Following its two-part finale that aired on May 11, Watson has entered a new chapter, with CBS outlining plans for the series to return in its 2025-2026 broadcast lineup. The show, which stars Morris Chestnut as Dr. John Watson, wrapped its debut season with a dramatic confrontation involving James Moriarty, portrayed by Randall Park. Set in present-day Pittsburgh, Watson reimagines the classic literary figure as the head of the Holmes Clinic of Diagnostic Medicine, where he and his team investigate complex medical mysteries. Described by Chestnut as 'doc-detectives,' the characters work both inside and outside the hospital to uncover causes of rare illnesses. The season's final episodes introduced Moriarty as the figure behind Sherlock Holmes' presumed death, a storyline that added intensity and lasting consequences for the clinic's staff. 'By the end, every member of Watson's team is permanently changed,' said executive producer Craig Sweeny. 'And not all the doctors make it to Season 2 as part of the group.' Although a specific premiere date has not been announced, CBS has placed Watson in its upcoming Sunday night slot at 10 p.m., following the new Yellowstone spinoff Y: Marshals. Speculation continues around which cast members will return, though Chestnut is expected to reprise his lead role. Season one also featured performances from Eve Harlow, Rochelle Aytes, Inga Schlingmann, Peter Mark Kendall, Ritchie Coster, Riley Orr, and Randall Park. Despite ongoing questions about Sherlock Holmes' fate, Sweeny has expressed no current plans to introduce him as a recurring figure. 'My belief is that Holmes is gone,' he said. 'But I don't want to be held to that if there's some great story.' Watson is available to watch on CBS, with streaming options on Paramount+ and Pluto.


Express Tribune
08-05-2025
- Express Tribune
Hania Aamir warns of users impersonating her
In an Instagram Story shared on Wednesday, Hania Aamir clarified that her public account (@haniaheheofficial) is her one and only Instagram handle, requesting her followers not to interact with any other accounts claiming to be her. "This is the only account I have on Instagram. In case anyone is getting any requests from other accounts posing as me, please report them. Thank you," she wrote. Criticising the move, netizens were quick to question Hania for following a now-deactivated account, @naaamtousunahogaa. They also linked the Kabhi Main Kabhi Tum star to the account due to its posts, which prominently featured her. "Then why did she follow the account and deactivated it?" a user wondered. Hania also drew backlash for posting the personal update while the country wards off war. "There are more important things in the world, Miss Hania," a user wrote, while another said, "Seriously, even now she's thinking about her account?" Earlier, the Janaan actor publicly refuted a viral social media post falsely attributed to her in the wake of the attack in Pahalgam. The fake post, which circulated widely across Instagram and X, claimed Hania blamed the Pakistan Army for the attack and appealed to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to spare Pakistani civilians in the aftermath. The alleged post, styled to look like an Instagram Story from the actor's account, accused Pakistan's Chief of Army Staff, General Asim Munir, of orchestrating the violence. It also urged the Indian government to differentiate between military decisions and the sentiments of the Pakistani public. But Hania firmly denounced the quote, calling it entirely fabricated and misrepresentative of her views. "Recently, a statement has been falsely attributed to me and is being widely circulated on social media. I want to address this directly: I did not make this statement, and I do not endorse or align with the words being linked to me," she clarified in a statement shared on her verified Instagram account. "It is entirely fabricated and misrepresents who I am and what I believe." Hania was also among the Pakistani celebrities who condemned the attack, mourning the lives lost though not without defending her country against unverified claims. "In times like these, it's easy to let emotions cloud our judgment," she wrote, "but we must remember: the actions of extremists do not represent an entire nation or its people. Assigning blame without proof only deepens divides and distracts from the real need for compassion, justice, and healing."