Enola Holmes
Came out; 2020
Time; 2 hours 3 minutes
Watched: Netflix
Rating; PG-13 for some violence
IMDB Rating; 6.6/10
Caution; Spoiler Alert
Staring.
Millie Bobby Brown as Enola Holmes
Henry Cavill as Sherlock Holmes
Sam Claflin as Mycroft Holmes
Helena Bonham Carter as Eudoria Holmes
Louis Patridge as Tewkewbury
Adeel Akhtar as Lestrade
Susan Wokomas as Edith
Hattie Morahan as Lady Tewkesbury
Story Line.
England, 1884 - a world on the brink of change. On the morning of her 16th birthday, Enola Holmes (Millie Bobby Brown) wakes to find that her mother (Helena Bonham Carter) has disappeared, leaving behind an odd assortment of gifts but no apparent clue as to where she's gone or why. After a free-spirited childhood, Enola suddenly finds herself under the care of her brothers Sherlock (Henry Cavill) and Mycroft (Sam Claflin), both set on sending her away to a finishing school for "proper" young ladies. Refusing to follow their wishes, Enola escapes to search for her mother in London. But when her journey finds her entangled in a mystery surrounding a young runaway Lord (Louis Partridge), Enola becomes a super-sleuth in her own right, outwitting her famous brother as she unravels a conspiracy that threatens to set back the course of history.
Thoughts.
This looked like an interesting take on Sherlock Holmes, upon looking it up it seems that this was based on a book. Millie Bobby Brown is an amazing actress so we thought we'd give it a try.
I personally found the movie a bit boring, it like most movies had some good parts to it. In the end I was still left with questions and I hate that.
CAUTION; Major Spoiler Alert
As
the film opens, Enola Holmes rides her bicycle and narrates to the
audience. She explains that her mother Eudoria, keen on word games,
insisted on naming her Enola (a reverse of the word Alone) after her
birth, and that following the early death of her father and
subsequent departure of her elder brothers, Mycroft and Sherlock, her
mother raised and educated her in their country home of Ferndell
Hall. Eudoria raised Enola on many books, sciences, and sports, and
encouraged a free and playful lifestyle, unlike the stuffy and
traditional schools and expectations of Victorian England. Despite
this usual closeness, Enola once accidentally interrupted a secret
meeting between her mother and a group of other women, who hid their
intentions from her. She goes on to explain that on the morning of
her sixteenth birthday, Enola awoke to find her mother missing,
leaving only a wooden gift box with a booklet on flowers, cards, and
pencils as a birthday present passed on to her by their housekeeper,
Mrs. Lane. Back in the present, Enola tells the audience that a week
has passed since Eudoria's disappearance, and she is on the way to
the train station to receive Mycroft, now a rich aristocrat working
for the government, and Sherlock, now the famous detective. Upon
their arrival, her brothers fail to recognize her at first, having
not seen her since she was small. Mycroft is horrified that Enola is
out in public without a hat or gloves, and dirty from having fallen
off her bike on the way to the station. He is further annoyed to find
that Enola has not brought the carriage he has been paying for,
confusing Enola as they do not own a carriage. Sherlock hires one to
take them to Ferndell, and upon their arrival, Mycroft balks at the
state of the house. He tells Sherlock that he has been sending a
great deal of money to Eudoria, who sent letters to him detailing the
costs of the household, including rooms, members of household staff,
and teachers for Enola, which do not exist. Sherlock investigates,
and surmises that although Eudoria's absence is not foul play, she
does not intend to return. Mycroft and Sherlock discuss what to do
with their younger sister now that Eudoria is gone. Mycroft feels
that Eudoria has robbed him, and saddled him with Enola. Sherlock
thinks Enola should be allowed to stay at Ferndell, as Eudoria
educated her on virtually every subject herself, and she seems to be
very clever. However, Mycroft insists on sending her away to a strict
boarding school so she may be turned into a proper lady, citing that
she is his ward now, and Sherlock has shown little interest in the
family. Mycroft sends for Miss Harrison of Miss Harrison's Finishing
School for Young Ladies, and Enola's free spirit and defiant attitude
gains her a slap from the headmistress. Enola begs not to be sent
away, but Mycroft is adamant, and Sherlock refuses to help. That
evening, Sherlock finds Enola sketching and recounts the only
memories he has of her, including a pine cone wrapped in wool she
called Dash, after one of Queen Victoria's dogs. Enola chastises
Sherlock for never visiting or writing home, telling him she has
followed every one of his cases. Sherlock sees Eudoria's vanishing as
an interesting mystery to be solved, and tells Enola to look for
what's already in front of her. That night, Enola finds a secret
coded message from her mother in the gift box she left. She decodes
it and follows the clues in her booklet to a hidden envelope filled
with money addressed to her, with the only note saying: "Our
future is up to us." Enola decides to run away to search for her
mother, dressing as a boy and boarding a train bound for London. A
rich family is at the station, frantically looking for someone. Enola
notices a latecomer on the train wearing a brown bowler hat who gives
a signal to someone on the platform. The train leaves and is well on
it's way when a boy Enola's age pops out of a large travel bag in her
compartment. Enola deduces that this is the boy the family at the
station was looking for, and he introduces himself has the Viscount
Tewkesbury, Marquis of Basilweather, and says that he is running
away. Enola tells him of the man in the bowler hat who she has also
deduced has been sent to look for him. Sure enough, the Bowler Hat
man is approaching their carriage, and Enola leaves, not wanting to
get involved, as the man passes her and finds Tewkesbury. She hears
the boy scream, and returns to find the man holding him outside the
train door, about to smash him into a tunnel wall. Enola attacks the
man, Linthorn, and saves Tewkesbury, jumping off the train just
before a bridge to strand the attempted murderer.
Sherlock and
Mycroft discover Enola has run off, angering Mycroft. Mrs. Lane tells
Sherlock that Enola knows nothing of the outside world in
practicality, and asks him not to abandon her a second time. Enola
and Tewkesbury begin to walk across the countryside toward London,
stopping to rest at dark, where Tewkesbury reveals his vast knowledge
of plants, flowers, and edible fungi to forage for food. Enola cuts
his long hair short to help him not be recognized, as he explains
that, after narrowly avoiding being crushed by a falling tree branch,
he realized that he didn't want to join the army like his uncle as
his family wants him to, or take his seat in the House of Lords like
his deceased father. Enola tells him in turn of her decision to run
away rather than be sent to Miss Harrison's. Tewkesbury proposes they
stick together in London, but Enola refuses, and they go their
separate ways upon reaching the city. Using the money Eudoria left
for her, Enola disguises herself as a well-bred lady, and finds a
boarding house to stay at. Meanwhile, Sherlock and Mycroft return to
London. Mycroft has the police on the lookout for Enola, and Sherlock
has turned down the Tewkesbury case in favor of searching for her and
Eudoria himself. Mycroft is insistent that their name be kept out of
it, not wanting to be embarrassed by Enola, and complains about an
upcoming vote to reform voter rights by the House of Lords, which is
at a deadlock. Enola leaves a coded message in various newspapers for
her mother, finding that the Viscount Tewkesbury's disappearance has
gotten a lot of press. She then tracks down the correspondent her
mother often wrote to, Ethel, who runs Jiu-Jitsu classes for women
above her tea shop and used to teach Enola self defense. She tells
Enola that Eudoria does not want to be found and has secret work to
do in London, and Enola remembers her as one of the women at
Eudoria's secret meeting. Enola finds fireworks in Ethel's office
after she returns to her students, and recalls hearing coded words in
their conversation at the meeting. Decoding them as locations, she
surmises that they are hiding something at the docks, and goes to
investigate. Once there, Enola finds a warehouse bearing a purple
ribbon, the same ribbon as was on her birthday gift from her mother.
Sneaking in, she finds great quantities of fireworks, gunpowder, and
other explosives. She also finds posters for suffragette rallies, and
is horrified to find full fledged bombs hidden away. She questions
weather she should continue her attempts to find her mother, as it
seems she is involved in dangerous activities. As she goes to leave
the docks, Enola is ambushed by Linthorn, who interrogates her about
Tewkesbury's location and attempts to drown her in a water trough.
She outsmarts him, momentarily getting away, and explains to the
audience how he mother taught her various subjects, including
physical combat. An intense fight between her and Linthorn ensues,
with Enola eventually being overpowered by Linthorn's superior
strength. He throws her through the warehouse door and attempts to
finish the job and stab her, though she is protected by her whalebone
corset. She sets off the gunpowder in the room and escapes Linthorn.
While nursing her wounds, Enola tells the audience of how she once
almost died trying to save a sheep, and her mother's advice not to
risk her life to help others. However, Enola decides she cannot leave
Tewkesbury to his fate, and resolves to find and help him.
Enola
once again disguises herself, this time as a widow named May Beatrice
Poesy, in order to gain a meeting with Lady Tewkesbury, the marquis'
mother, at Basilweather Hall. Tewkesbury's Mother, Uncle, and
Grandmother are all skeptical of Enola's claim of being a lady
detective, until she says she works for Sherlock Holmes as an advance
investigator. This piques their interest, though Inspector Lestrade
of Scotland Yard enters and says that Sherlock always works alone.
Tewkesbury's Uncle, Sir Whimbrel, sends them both away, stating that
they do not need more help. Enola and Lestrade test each other on
their knowledge of Sherlock, finding themselves equal. Lestrade
leaves, confused by 'May'. Enola pays a gardener for his uniform, and
is pointed towards the woods as the place where Tewkesbury spent most
of his time. Lestrade meets with Mycroft and tells him of 'May
Beatrice Poesy' who matches the description of Enola. Mycroft
confirms she is his sister, and tells Lestrade to find her. In the
forest, Enola finds the tree branch that almost killed Tewkesbury,
and discovers saw marks on it's base. She also investigates his
hidden tree house, where he laid his plans, and indicated fake
locations on a map of London so as to send his pursuers in the wrong
direction, including (coincidentally), the docks where Linthorn
jumped Enola. She finds flower pressings in a travel book, and
theorizes where the marquis is actually hiding. She is surprised by
Tewkesbury's grandmother, the Dowager, who speaks with 'May'
regarding the boy's disappearance, and tells her about his father.
She says he was a "new thinker", and young Tewkesbury is
likely the same. She tells 'May' to send her love to her grandson
should she see him before she does, and lets her leave without
trouble for snooping.
Sherlock follows clues from Ferndell to
Edith's tea shop, and asks to speak with her, bargaining for her time
with the leverage of her banned books she lets her customers read. He
inquires as to Eudoria's whereabouts, saying she needs to return to
take care of Enola. Edith tells him Eudoria is doing good work to
change the world, and Enola seems to be taking care of herself. Edith
also tells him of the "useless boy" Enola ran into, and
that she is also looking for Eudoria. She admits she is pleased that
Sherlock is at least taking an interest, as Eudoria figured he would
always ignore his younger sister. She says that Enola needs Sherlock,
and advises him to find and help her. Later, Enola arrives at Covent
Garden Market, where she tracks down Tewkesbury selling flowers among
the crowded stalls. He is pleased, if surprised, to see her again,
and asks why she went through the trouble of finding him, thinking
she might turn him in for the reward money being offered. She tells
him that she is actually there because his life is still in danger,
and they both confess to having missed each other since their
departure. Enola takes him back to her lodgings house, where
Tewkesbury finds a pile of newspapers. Enola explains how her mother
left her, and she is waiting for a response to the message she sent
her. They bond over both having lost their fathers, and how the rest
of the people in their lives don't seem to want them. Enola tells
Tewkesbury that despite his family being wealthy enough to send a
detective to find him, someone in his family sent a murderer instead.
Enola says that she is sure his father was actually murdered, and
that whoever did it must want him dead for the same reason. She also
informs him of her findings at Basilweather, and that the branch that
nearly killed him had been intentionally cut. Lestrade ambushes them,
but Enola notices him and counters. They manage to make it to Enola's
room, but struggle to keep the door closed. Enola tells Tewkesbury to
go out the window and disappear, as his life will be in jeopardy if
he is caught, and there is not enough time for them both to escape.
Tewkesbury argues, but Enola orders him to go, holding the door just
long enough for him to get away, and is caught by Lestrade . She is
turned over to Mycroft, who confiscates the money her mother gave
her, and takes her to Miss Harrison's Finishing School for Young
Ladies. She is kept locked in her room in between lessons, and tries
to remain defiant of the headmistress, though her spirits begin to
dwindle. Later, Enola is told that her brother has come to visit her,
and she is relieved to see that it is Sherlock. She checks his
newspaper for a possible message, and is angry about her situation.
Sherlock encourages her to take the lessons to heart, as they may
come in handy in future cases. She asks him about Eudoria, and he
says he has tracked her trail (albeit by following separate clues)
and found the docks one step behind Enola's confrontation with
Linthorn, and they discuss the bombs found there. She accuses him of
helping Mycroft catch her, and seeing her only as a case, which he
denies, and admits that he came because he cares about her. He asks
her about the Tewkesbury case, having deduced that she was with the
boy on the train. He is impressed with her detective work, he asks if
she has solved the mystery yet. He gives her some advice, detective
to detective, and also gives her Dash, the pine cone dog, having
found it among Eudoria's things, telling Enola that he and Eudoria
both find her extraordinary. After Sherlock leaves, Enola looks
through the paper, and finds that the Reform Bill is still tied in
the House of Lords, and another article about the still missing
marquis. Just then a large basket is delivered to Enola, supposedly
from Mycroft, but is revealed to be Tewkesbury, having smuggled
himself in. Enola is overjoyed to see him, and is relieved that he is
alright. He intends to get her out the same way he came in, but Enola
alters the plan to get around Miss Harrison's watchful eye.
Tewkesbury delivers the basket with Enola inside to Miss Harrison,
telling her it's from Mycroft (who she is sweet on), and Enola
escapes while Miss Harrison sends the lad away. They steal her
motorcar, and Enola tells Tewkesbury that he is being targeted to
prevent him from taking his seat in the House of Lords and voting yes
on the Reform Bill, and that his uncle (who would inherit the seat
and vote no) has the most to gain by killing both his father and him.
Inspired by Sherlock's advice, Enola decides to go to Basilweather
and confront Sir Whimbrel. They enter, but find the house dark and
deserted, and are trapped inside by Linthorn, who was waiting for
them and is wielding a shotgun. Enola and the marquis hide in the
shadows, and narrowly avoid being shot. Enola jumps the gunman, but
is rendered unconscious. Before Linthorn can kill her, Tewkesbury
attacks him, knocking his gun away, but is also subdued. Linthorn
begins to strangle Tewkesbury as Enola struggles to regain
consciousness. She manages to grapple Linthorn, knocking him
headfirst into a sharp fixture, killing him. The Dowager enters, and
Tewkesbury is heartbroken to discover that it was she who hired
Linthorn to kill him and his father. She picks up the shotgun,
telling her grandson that she had to prevent him from voting on the
Reform Bill. She tells him that she sent his mother and uncle back to
London to look for him, and explains that the future of the country
depends on his death. She shoots Tewkesbury in the chest in cold
blood, seemingly killing him. Enola disarms the Dowager, and mourns
over Tewkesbury. However, Tewkesbury wakes up, having only been
knocked out from the impact, and reveals that he hid a steel chest
plate from one of the suits of armor under his jacket, protecting him
from the shot. He rises and tells the Dowager her time is
over.
Sherlock arrives at Scotland Yard and tells Lestrade to
arrest the Dowager, as she is trying to kill the marquis, and had his
father murdered. He explains that Sir Whimbrel was away at war and
couldn't have done it, but that the Dowager wanted him to stand
against the Reform Bill and any other such changes, as the Viscount
and his father before him would have voted in favor. Lestrade reveals
that Enola has actually solved the case first, impressing Sherlock.
Tewkesbury reunites with his mother and uncle, and takes his seat in
the House of Lords. Enola sees him off at the gate. They share an
emotional farewell, but promise to see each other again soon, and
Tewkesbury prepares himself for the final Reform Bill vote. Enola
discovers a coded message for her in the paper asking to rendezvous,
but upon decoding it, surmises that Sherlock, not Eudoria, has sent
it. She disguises herself and goes anyway. Sherlock is indeed waiting
for her, but Mycroft says she's outsmarted him. Sherlock offers to
take Enola in as his ward once they find her, which Mycroft agrees
to, annoyed that with Tewkesbury's vote, the Reform Bill has passed.
As they leave, Sherlock notices Dash, but doesn't see Enola, and we
see her watch them as they go. She returns to her new boarding house
to find her mother waiting for her. Eudoria explains that she wanted
to tell Enola where she went, but that it isn't safe and she can't
stay too long. She is proud of Enola for saving the marquis, and they
briefly reunite before Eudoria leaves again, telling Enola to send
her a message if she ever needs help. Enola tells the audience she
will have to follow her own path, and that it's time she found her
place in the world as a detective, saying that "Our future is up
to us".
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