Zürcher Nachrichten - Restoration experts piece together silent Sherlock Holmes mystery

EUR -
AED 3.819445
AFN 72.930877
ALL 98.409741
AMD 411.855057
ANG 1.871113
AOA 948.370004
ARS 1066.533281
AUD 1.66666
AWG 1.871783
AZN 1.774408
BAM 1.953413
BBD 2.096238
BDT 124.068386
BGN 1.956
BHD 0.392264
BIF 3070.048333
BMD 1.039879
BND 1.410776
BOB 7.174233
BRL 7.007785
BSD 1.038231
BTN 88.375004
BWP 14.419379
BYN 3.397648
BYR 20381.633192
BZD 2.089147
CAD 1.493948
CDF 2984.453296
CHF 0.935689
CLF 0.037283
CLP 1028.742461
CNY 7.590075
CNH 7.599281
COP 4588.789529
CRC 527.155804
CUC 1.039879
CUP 27.5568
CVE 110.130418
CZK 25.147816
DJF 184.807301
DKK 7.460611
DOP 63.242716
DZD 140.622887
EGP 52.922993
ERN 15.598189
ETB 132.191459
FJD 2.411116
FKP 0.823566
GBP 0.828946
GEL 2.921725
GGP 0.823566
GHS 15.26135
GIP 0.823566
GMD 74.871685
GNF 8973.034752
GTQ 7.997227
GYD 217.214559
HKD 8.077194
HNL 26.378765
HRK 7.458956
HTG 135.754105
HUF 410.783528
IDR 16836.996811
ILS 3.795616
IMP 0.823566
INR 88.672947
IQD 1360.038003
IRR 43765.926849
ISK 145.115049
JEP 0.823566
JMD 161.762323
JOD 0.737589
JPY 163.679039
KES 134.185875
KGS 90.469715
KHR 4172.900623
KMF 484.713719
KPW 935.890739
KRW 1523.537244
KWD 0.32047
KYD 0.865243
KZT 537.852732
LAK 22705.253676
LBP 92972.485559
LKR 305.986078
LRD 188.959088
LSL 19.305009
LTL 3.070493
LVL 0.629013
LYD 5.096772
MAD 10.469906
MDL 19.155591
MGA 4897.015738
MKD 61.536199
MMK 3377.487223
MNT 3533.509537
MOP 8.30565
MRU 41.445353
MUR 48.936493
MVR 16.012645
MWK 1800.299993
MXN 20.98038
MYR 4.64928
MZN 66.452162
NAD 19.305009
NGN 1603.577134
NIO 38.203315
NOK 11.807366
NPR 141.400206
NZD 1.841651
OMR 0.400395
PAB 1.038231
PEN 3.866076
PGK 4.213851
PHP 60.325996
PKR 289.040087
PLN 4.260315
PYG 8097.105158
QAR 3.775986
RON 4.97499
RSD 117.013794
RUB 103.979424
RWF 1448.330108
SAR 3.904126
SBD 8.717885
SCR 14.825583
SDG 625.485958
SEK 11.530186
SGD 1.411797
SHP 0.823566
SLE 23.705143
SLL 21805.750967
SOS 593.374883
SRD 36.456086
STD 21523.400853
SVC 9.084898
SYP 2612.728051
SZL 19.313399
THB 35.586691
TJS 11.35812
TMT 3.649976
TND 3.310455
TOP 2.435504
TRY 36.698196
TTD 7.055378
TWD 34.047748
TZS 2517.72344
UAH 43.532602
UGX 3800.355881
USD 1.039879
UYU 46.213526
UZS 13403.620478
VES 53.632476
VND 26451.408342
VUV 123.456547
WST 2.872965
XAF 655.156384
XAG 0.035138
XAU 0.000396
XCD 2.810326
XDR 0.796027
XOF 655.156384
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.359742
ZAR 19.490555
ZMK 9360.158027
ZMW 28.732888
ZWL 334.840692
  • SCS

    0.0800

    11.73

    +0.68%

  • AZN

    -0.3300

    66.3

    -0.5%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    34.03

    -0.09%

  • CMSC

    -0.1321

    23.77

    -0.56%

  • BCC

    0.9500

    123.19

    +0.77%

  • NGG

    -0.1600

    58.86

    -0.27%

  • RIO

    -0.0300

    59.2

    -0.05%

  • RELX

    0.3000

    45.89

    +0.65%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    22.9

    +0.26%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    23.65

    +0.42%

  • RBGPF

    59.8000

    59.8

    +100%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    36.26

    +0.11%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    8.43

    +0.71%

  • BP

    0.0400

    28.79

    +0.14%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    7.24

    -0.14%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.15

    +0.41%

Restoration experts piece together silent Sherlock Holmes mystery
Restoration experts piece together silent Sherlock Holmes mystery / Photo: Justin TALLIS - AFP

Restoration experts piece together silent Sherlock Holmes mystery

Sherlock Holmes fans are being promised a most authentic depiction of the fictional detective, with the restoration of a century-old silent film series chronicling the London sleuth's adventures.

Text size:

Audiences will be treated to a first glimpse of the restored works from the early 1920s next week at a London Film Festival screening, accompanied by a newly commissioned live score from Royal Academy of Music performers.

The October 16 premiere of just three of the short films, in what is being called "Silent Sherlock: Three Classic Cases", will take place in the Victorian-era grandeur of the Alexandra Palace Theatre in north London.

A wider release on DVD and Blu-Ray, and encompassing an international tour, will then follow, with the British Film Institute (BFI) restoration team excited to unveil its years-long efforts.

"They're the last silent Sherlock-related works to be restored," explained Bryony Dixon, the BFI curator who led the project.

"The other surviving ones have already been done, so these are the things that audiences have been waiting for patiently," she told AFP at the film charity's national archive in Berkhamsted, northwest of the UK capital.

"Sherlock Holmes is always popular, and popular all over the world. As they say: you could just write Sherlock Holmes on a cardboard box and sell it.

"So it's of interest to people and it's time that it was seen."

- 'Authenticity' -

Produced in 1921-23 by British film company Stoll Pictures, the 45 episodes of "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" and two feature films that are being restored all feature screen star of the era Eille Norwood.

He was author Arthur Conan Doyle's favourite on-screen Sherlock.

Conan Doyle's creation has been adapted for the big and small screen hundreds of times, with Guinness World Records hailing him the most portrayed literary human character in film and television history.

Famous faces to have played Sherlock recently include Robert Downey Jr and Benedict Cumberbatch.

But Stoll's black-and-white adaptations were made with the author's approval while he was still penning the stories, setting them apart, according to Dixon.

"People will be interested to see a Sherlock Holmes film version... in an early stage of development for the screen," she said.

"There is a level of authenticity to this character, vis-a-vis the Conan Doyle creation, that you might not get with later Sherlock Holmes."

– Time-consuming -

Restoring the more than 20 hours of footage -- funded through an initiative of data storage and management firm Iron Mountain -- began in 2019 at the BFI's vast archive.

The repository, on a former farm, houses hundreds of thousands of reels dating back decades that are stacked on lofty rows of shelves in refrigerated vaults.

Particularly old footage on nitrate film -- like the Stoll series -- are also kept at another, even colder, site in western England but brought to Berkhamsted for restoration.

Conservators in white laboratory coats have spent months meticulously checking and cleaning reels of original negatives and copies.

Some were damaged, requiring painstaking repair.

"Despite all the damage, it is in pretty good condition," said senior conservator Kirsty Shanks, noting that old reels can arrive decomposed into "powdery, sticky, solid messes".

Many of the Sherlock nitrate prints were mouldy, oily, brittle and fragile, requiring time-consuming cleaning by hand, she added.

Another challenge has been negatives arriving in sections, rather than complete reels, requiring staff to sequence them.

- 'Special' -

Down a corridor lined with vintage movie posters and old film equipment on display, Ben Thompson has spent hundreds of hours in a windowless room, working on the endeavour.

The image quality lead has had to ensure the new digital version replicates the 1920s footage in texture, colour palette and other aspects.

He uses software to match the original filmmakers' use of colour tinges -- primarily blue and amber dyes -- to parts of the negatives to help denote night, day and flashbacks.

Thompson also has a hand in repairs, noting the beginning and end of reels have often borne the brunt of past use and require the most intensive rehabilitation.

"It's the starts and ends where you get into the real manual work," he explained.

He recounted working for days on a single 10-second opening shot of Sherlock's Baker Street home neighbourhood. In comparison, some mid-reel scenes required just minutes of repair.

BFI veteran Shanks described the project as the most "challenging" restoration of her career but still a labour of love.

F.Carpenteri--NZN