Popularity: 4 (history)
Director: | Harry Bradbeer |
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Writer: | Nancy Springer, Jack Thorne |
Staring: |
While searching for her missing mother, intrepid teen Enola Holmes uses her sleuthing skills to outsmart big brother Sherlock and help a runaway lord. | |
Release Date: | Sep 23, 2020 |
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Director: | Harry Bradbeer |
Writer: | Nancy Springer, Jack Thorne |
Genres: | Adventure, Crime, Mystery |
Keywords | detective, based on novel or book, child prodigy, victorian england, female protagonist, period drama, female detective, runaway teen, books, mother daughter relationship, brother sister relationship, sherlock holmes, childish love interest, indifferent |
Production Companies | Legendary Pictures, PCMA Productions |
Box Office |
Revenue: $0
Budget: $21,000,000 |
Updates |
Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update) Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
Name | Character |
---|---|
Millie Bobby Brown | Enola Holmes |
Henry Cavill | Sherlock Holmes |
Sam Claflin | Mycroft Holmes |
Helena Bonham Carter | Eudoria Holmes |
Louis Partridge | Lord Tewkesbury |
Adeel Akhtar | Lestrade |
Fiona Shaw | Miss Harrison |
Frances de la Tour | The Dowager |
Burn Gorman | Linthorn |
Susan Wokoma | Edith |
Claire Rushbrook | Mrs. Lane |
David Bamber | Sir Whimbrel |
Hattie Morahan | Lady Tewkesbury |
Gaby French | Seamstress |
Paul Copley | Station Master |
Ellie Haddington | Miss Gregory |
Alex Kelly | Miss Gregory II |
James Duke | Footman |
Connor Catchpole | Gardener |
Sarah Flind | Tea Shop Assistant |
Dempsey Bovell | Fleet Street Hawker |
Neil Bell | Constable |
Sofia Stavrinou | Young Enola |
Sophie Dixon | Toddler Enola |
David Kirkbride | Agitator |
Delroy Atkinson | Porter |
Mary Roscoe | Grace Whitting |
Anthony Aje | Newspaper Boy (House of Lords) |
Anthony Rickman | Newspaper Boy (Fleet Street) |
Philip Scott-Wallace | Newspaper Editor |
Tuyen Do | Boarding School Teacher |
Esther Coles | Miss Fox |
Owen Atlas | Young Sherlock Holmes (uncredited) |
Paul Parker | Police Inspector (uncredited) |
Heather Pearse | Hawker (uncredited) |
Jay Simpson | Conductor (uncredited) |
Name | Job |
---|---|
Liam Coote | Stunts |
Matt Curtis | Title Designer |
Nancy Springer | Novel |
Harry Bradbeer | Director |
Jack Thorne | Screenplay |
Consolata Boyle | Costume Design |
Daniel Pemberton | Original Music Composer |
Giles Nuttgens | Director of Photography, "A" Camera Operator |
Jo McLaren | Stunt Coordinator |
Nicholas Daines | Stunts |
Sarah Lochlan | Stunts |
Marlow Warrington-Mattei | Stunts |
Annabel Wood | Stunts |
Alex Bailey | Still Photographer |
Adam Bosman | Editor |
Michael Carlin | Production Design |
Michael Dreyer | Unit Production Manager |
Simon Fraser | Unit Production Manager |
Jack Ravenscroft | First Assistant Director |
Joe Barlow | Second Assistant Director |
Fizz Hood | Stunt Double |
Hasit Savani | Stunt Double |
Juliette Cheveley | Stunt Double |
Ian Pead | Fight Choreographer |
Choi Ho Man | Supervising Art Director |
Martin Hitchcock | Art Direction |
Andrew Munro | Art Direction |
Ashley Winter | Art Direction |
Nina Armstrong | Stunts |
Matthew Bell | Stunts |
Nadia Hansell | Stunts |
Chus Lucas | Stunts |
Kim McGarrity | Stunts |
Adrian McGaw | Stunts |
Ruth Nelson | Stunts |
James O'Daly | Stunts |
Shane Roberts | Stunts |
Alli Ryan | Stunts |
Luke Scott | Stunts |
Lisa Chugg | Set Decoration |
Lorna Houlihan | Assistant Art Director |
Suzanna Smith | Assistant Art Director |
Paul Edwards | "B" Camera Operator, Steadicam Operator |
Ray Meere | First Assistant "A" Camera |
Harry Wingate | Second Assistant "A" Camera |
Spencer Murray | First Assistant "B" Camera |
Alistair King | Second Assistant "B" Camera |
Adam Shell | Digital Imaging Technician |
Jane Houston | Script Supervisor |
Will Whale | Production Sound Mixer |
Andy Cole | Gaffer |
Dave Thom | Best Boy Electric |
Alan Graham | Rigging Gaffer |
Bernd Mayer | Key Grip |
Mark Holt | Special Effects Supervisor |
Aimee Watret | Special Effects Coordinator |
Jess MacDonald | Location Manager |
Roy Chapman | Property Master |
Marion Weise | Costume Supervisor |
Joanne Lees | Assistant Costume Designer |
Bethany Cross | Costume Coordinator |
Sian Grigg | Hair Designer, Makeup Designer |
Carol Hemming | Hairstylist |
Sarah Nuth | Makeup & Hair |
Claudia Stolze | Makeup & Hair |
Emanuele Giraldo | First Assistant Editor |
Emma Zee | Post Production Supervisor |
Helen Judd | Visual Effects Producer |
Michael Bruce Ellis | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Fiona Harper | Production Coordinator |
Valentina König | Assistant Production Coordinator |
Chris Bevan | Assistant Production Coordinator |
Eleanor Coverdale | Assistant Production Coordinator |
Jools Faiers | Graphic Designer |
Sav Akyüz | Storyboard Artist |
Molly Blake | Art Department Coordinator |
Amandeep Rahi | Set Decoration Buyer |
Olivia Brittain | Casting Associate |
Rebecca Rossmaur | Casting Assistant |
Catherine Garlick | Casting Assistant |
Verity Naughton | Additional Casting |
Penny Dyer | Dialect Coach |
Nicola Graydon-Harris | Unit Publicist |
Rob Harris | Unit Publicist |
Nessa King | Production Accountant |
Harry Skinner | Payroll Accountant |
Nina Hartstone | Supervising Sound Editor |
Eilam Hoffman | Supervising Sound Editor |
Oliver Ferris | Foley Artist |
Jens Rosenlund Petersen | Supervising Dialogue Editor |
Amy Felton | Dialogue Editor |
Samir Fočo | Sound Designer |
Tom Sayers | Sound Designer |
Steve Browell | Sound Effects Editor |
Louise Burton | Assistant Sound Editor |
Mike Tehrani | ADR Mixer |
Sue Harding | Foley Artist |
Sophia Hardman | Foley Mixer |
Dario Swade | Foley Editor |
Maria Kelly | ADR Recordist |
Warren Lever | Construction Manager |
Sian Lyn-Jones | Construction Coordinator |
David Beminster | Transportation Captain |
Mason Durrell | Transportation Co-Captain |
Rachel Bucknor | Unit Medic |
Peter Talbot | Second Unit Director of Photography |
Alison Litton | Music Supervisor |
Peter Afterman | Music Supervisor |
Jane Berry | Music Coordinator |
Andrew Skeet | Conductor, Orchestrator |
Ben Smithers | Music Editor |
Catherine Hébert | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Pratik Chaudhari | Visual Effects |
Markus Andreas | Sound Assistant |
Tom Hannibal | Visual Effects Editor |
Jina Jay | Casting |
Will Deville | Stunts |
Arthur Conan Doyle | Characters |
Name | Title |
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Millie Bobby Brown | Producer |
Mary Parent | Producer |
Harry Bradbeer | Executive Producer |
Paige Brown | Producer |
Michael Dreyer | Executive Producer |
Ali Mendes | Producer |
Alex Garcia | Producer |
Jane Houston | Co-Producer |
Joshua Grode | Executive Producer |
Organization | Category | Person |
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Popularity History
Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | 4 | 41 | 54 | 31 |
2024 | 5 | 39 | 63 | 26 |
2024 | 6 | 32 | 49 | 23 |
2024 | 7 | 40 | 67 | 25 |
2024 | 8 | 34 | 68 | 19 |
2024 | 9 | 28 | 58 | 20 |
2024 | 10 | 34 | 56 | 19 |
2024 | 11 | 37 | 86 | 23 |
2024 | 12 | 29 | 40 | 19 |
2025 | 1 | 39 | 69 | 25 |
2025 | 2 | 22 | 38 | 5 |
2025 | 3 | 10 | 31 | 3 |
2025 | 4 | 11 | 16 | 4 |
2025 | 5 | 7 | 16 | 5 |
2025 | 6 | 7 | 12 | 5 |
2025 | 7 | 5 | 6 | 4 |
2025 | 8 | 5 | 5 | 4 |
Trending Position
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 8 | 719 | 847 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 7 | 802 | 879 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 6 | 275 | 572 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 5 | 289 | 583 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 4 | 485 | 793 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 3 | 465 | 714 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 2 | 960 | 960 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2024 | 12 | 876 | 876 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2024 | 11 | 562 | 847 |
If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog @ https://www.msbreviews.com 2020 is unquestionably one of the most challenging years movie theaters ever had to face. The still going global pandemic closed down everything, including my favorite place to spend the most wonderf ... ul time. Therefore, the already growing streaming services got a huge bump, earning more and more subscribers during this tough phase in our lives. Netflix has been extremely busy releasing brand-new flicks since the beginning of the year, being The Devil All The Time, I’m Thinking of Ending Things, and Project Power the latest. Some better than others, but I’m still to find a 2020’s original film from the studio that I genuinely dislike. Is Enola Holmes the first one? Well, no, far from that. With such a talented cast and high production value, a new take on the classic Sherlock Holmes’ mysteries is certainly welcome, and this is one of my top two compliments. Debutant director Harry Bradbeer and Jack Thorne (His Dark Materials) offer a refreshing twist on the famous detective’s stories, not only by focusing on her less popular sister instead but also by delivering a different Sherlock than the one we’re used to seeing. The editing (Adam Bosman), cinematography (Giles Nuttgens), and score (Daniel Pemberton) contribute to quirky, fun, captivating scenes that help the viewer follow Enola’s assessment of several situations, including her thought process (interpretation of clues, formulating plans), most of the times by breaking the fourth wall. This last aspect takes me to my other top two praise, Millie Bobby Brown. She’s the reason why these sequences work so well. From the moment I first saw her in Stranger Things, I genuinely believed she would be a star. For the past few years, I’ve constantly left in writing that she will break the Oscars’ record for the youngest actress to ever win a Best Actress award. Millie still has a bit more than five years to achieve that, and she’s already leading major blockbusters like Godzilla: King of the Monsters. With this Netflix movie, Millie proves once again her versatility (already portrayed completely different characters in distinct genres), emotional range (effortlessly delivers any type of scene), and mature acting (rarely overacts or doesn’t offer enough, she’s always on point). She incorporates Enola in such a unique manner that I struggle to find a better choice to play this character, who is herself also a standout. Enola’s arc feels genuinely empowering. It doesn’t feel like a forced political statement nor a narratively illogical decision to develop this character in the way Thorne does. Every enigma she tries to decipher, every plan she needs to create to save someone or something, every choice she makes feels earned and justified. Enola doesn’t let herself be restricted by old society’s rules of how the world should work. She wants to be herself without having to answer to nobody. It might be a generic message, but it’s transmitted through seamless execution. Regarding the rest of the cast, Henry Cavill is a major surprise as Sherlock, and I won’t be shocked if it generates some controversy (update: it did). It’s a notably different version of the distant, emotionless, overly analytical Sherlock that Robert Downey Jr. and Benedict Cumberbatch interpreted, which I embrace with open arms. I don’t care about rights or origins. A character is what the actor and writer(s) make of it, it doesn’t belong to anyone let alone its “fans”. Cavill shows a cheekier display than what he’s used to presenting, and Thorne adjusted a couple of specific traits from the classic character. Louis Partridge and Sam Claflin are both excellent as Lord Viscount Tewksbury and Mycroft, respectively. The remaining actors all offer decent performances, but the two standouts are undoubtedly Millie and Cavill. As for the film itself, I was ready to write “it’s fine” half an hour before I finished it. Even though it feels unique in several areas, Enola Holmes still follows a pretty generic story, with formulaic plot points and the usual character drama. Sadly, it doesn’t really bring anything new story-wise. It features no surprises, which is not a good attribute for a movie with a central mystery. However, that lack of enthusiasm leads me to a significant issue I didn’t expect to find in the latter half of the film. Its mystery isn’t truly one, and it’s set aside midway through the movie, which is a questionable narrative decision. I don’t remember the last time (if ever) where a film completely discards its main storyline (one that received an entire first act of set up), replacing it with a young-adult romantic endeavor (which is pretty convincing, but not as a main storyline). I’m a firm advocate of the trailer-free methodology. Expectations can make or break the viewer’s opinion about a movie, and nowadays, trailers can be deceiving, misleading, and show way too much. I missed everything related to this film, watching it 100% blind. Had I watched Enola Holmes’ official trailer beforehand, I’d definitely be inclined to the negative side of the divisive line I stand on right now. Its trailer focuses on what most people will expect from the movie: the main mystery surrounding Enola’s mother disappearance. Considering how the film actually goes, it’s safe to write that its trailer is a bit deceiving. All in all, Enola Holmes offers a pleasant, refreshing take on a franchise that might have a new future now. Focusing on Sherlock Holmes’ sister, Harry Bradbeer and Jack Thorne deliver a light, fun, entertaining story, packed with action, clues to decipher, and a brilliant cast. Millie Bobby Brown keeps climbing up the stairs of success, demonstrating her versatility, range, and maturity as a young actress. It’s a matter of time until she becomes one of the most coveted actresses in Hollywood. Her chemistry with Henry Cavill and Louis Partridge is phenomenal, and her fourth wall breaks are fascinating. Technically, Enola’s thoughts and feelings are perfectly transmitted to the audience through outstanding editing, cinematography, and score. However, story-wise, it’s as generic as it could be, boasting absolutely no surprises, and a central mystery that’s not quite one. It’s still a fine Saturday night flick to enjoy with family and friends but be advised: its trailer is a tad misleading, so keep your mind open and expectations grounded. Rating: B-
Really good watch, might watch again, and can recommend. To absolutely fair, I'm not sure if this will appeal to Sherlock Holmes fans, but does expand the "Sherlock-verse", so make up your own mind. I love Millie Bobby Brown ("Stranger Things"), and this proves she is quite capable of not only ... leading a movie, but carrying the entire bloody thing. Despite what feels almost a lack of contribution from everyone else in the movie, this actually turns out quite good. I do wish she didn't do the fourth wall breaks, it really feels like she's either turning to a documentary crew or suddenly updating instagram. It was a little jarring, and they're clearly referencing Sherlock's "mind palace" techniques displayed in the movies, but with a "twist". I honestly expected someone to ask her if she's okay, like in "Dora and the Lost City of Gold". It would have been equally acceptable to do narration over her actions in the same, but I understand wanting to do something different. The only other people that didn't seem to be phoning it in were Burn Gorman who did quite a good antagonist, and Frances de la Tour who managed to elevate "concerned grannie". Maybe Sam Claflin did the job perfectly and Mycroft is supposed to be that bland and irritating, but Henry Cavill had an air of being relieved that didn't have to have Sherlock doing any real deductions, he just had to stand there and seem mildly intrigued by things. Overall, there is a good movie here in spite of itself, and the sad part is that it could have been great.
Not sure I'd like this as much if it was without Millie Bobby Brown, who is excellent. <em>'Enola Holmes'</em> is a good film, even if it does hold issues. The plot isn't one that entertained me that much, the mystery elements are average, though it still has a few moments. The humour is solid, a ... s it just about everything else. I didn't love the constant "fourth wall breaking", but Brown helps make it work to the point it didn't get annoying. Louis Partridge impresses too. Henry Cavill and Sam Claflin are strong casts to play Sherlock and Mycroft. I liked seeing Burn Gorman and Adeel Akhtar in their respective roles. The cast, as a whole, are enjoyable. I wouldn't be surprised to see this get multiple sequels, I actually reckon it could turn into a good if unspectacular series - as long as Brown sticks around.