Diamond Fields Advertiser

Fails on an elementary level

- FRANK SCHECK

YOU CAN feel the flop sweat emanating from the third on-screen pairing of Will Ferrell and John C Reilly.

Making their previous vehicles and

seem the height of comic sophistica­tion by comparison, features the duo parodying Arthur Conan Doyle’s famous characters to devastatin­gly unfunny effect. Numerous talented British thespians are wasted in supporting roles in this Christmas turkey that, not surprising­ly, wasn’t screened in advance for critics. Although making them troop out to cinemas on Christmas morning is something of which even Ebenezer Scrooge wouldn’t have approved.

Written and directed by Etan Cohen (previously responsibl­e for the similarly witless Ferrell comedy the film begins with a prologue featuring a schoolboy Holmes being bullied by his boarding school classmates. The humiliatio­n drives young Sherlock to suppress his emotions in favour of cold, calculatin­g logic, which, as origin stories go, won’t cause Spider-man to lose any sleep.

Cut to the grown Holmes and Watson attempting to thwart their nemesis, Professor Moriarty (Ralph Fiennes, mainly letting his beard do the acting) and solving crimes. When a dead body is found inside a giant birthday cake at Buckingham Palace, the duo is charged by Queen Victoria (Pam Ferris) with the task of investigat­ing the case. Assisting them in their efforts are the American Dr Grace Hart (Rebecca Hall) and her mute assistant Millicent (a very funny Lauren Lapkus, who practicall­y steals the film). The two women become love interests for the bachelor duo.

Ferrell and Reilly flounder in their titular roles. Kelly Macdonald gamely attempts to score laughs as an atypically young and saucy landlady Mrs Hudson, while Rob Brydon barely makes an impression as the harried Inspector Lestrade.

Despite being filmed entirely in England and at numerous historical locations,

boasts such ersatzlook­ing visuals it may as well have been shot on soundstage­s.

A feeble send-up that doesn’t even manage to be as funny as the Benedict Cumberbatc­h and Robert Downey jr versions.

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