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King Edward asks Sherlock Holmes to perform one more task before his retirement: to safeguard the Star of Africa on a trip to Cape Town. Soon the fabled jewel is stolen and several people end up being murdered.
King Edward asks Sherlock Holmes to perform one more task before his retirement: to safeguard the Star of Africa on a trip to Cape Town. Soon the fabled jewel is stolen and several people end up being murdered.
As a Sherlock Holmes mystery, the film primarily focuses on the intellectual challenge of solving a crime through logic and individual deduction, rather than engaging with broader political or ideological themes. The narrative prioritizes the resolution of a specific incident over systemic critique.
The movie utilizes traditional casting for its central characters, consistent with established portrayals. Its narrative maintains a neutral to positive framing of traditional identities, without explicit critiques or central DEI themes.
The film 'Sherlock Holmes: Incident at Victoria Falls' does not include any explicit LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on a traditional mystery plot without engaging with queer identity or experiences, resulting in no depiction.
The film does not feature any female characters engaging in or winning close-quarters physical combat against male opponents. Female roles are not depicted in significant action capacities within the narrative.
This film adaptation of Sherlock Holmes features the titular character, Dr. Watson, and other established figures like Irene Adler and Professor Moriarty, all portrayed with their canonical genders as established in Arthur Conan Doyle's original works.
This film features Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson, both portrayed by white actors (Christopher Lee and Patrick Macnee, respectively). These portrayals align with the characters' established race in the original source material, thus no race swap occurs.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources