![]() She shows us Enola’s curiosity, frustration, determination, and vulnerability. Animated inserts show us some of what she is thinking and some flashbacks to her mother’s lessons tell us more of what has-and has not-prepared her for these challenges. Her asides to the audience are delightful, especially when she unsuccessfully tries to reassure us, with a slight blush, that she just happens to be in the park Tewkesbury walks through on his way to the House of Lords. Find your allies, work with them, and you will become more who you are.” And when she needs an emergency ballroom dance lesson, the handsome Lord Tewkesbury ( Louis Partridge) is willing to oblige.īrown, also a producer of the film, is ideal for Enola. She says Enola has become “strong, individual, but perhaps a little lonely. Her eccentric mother (Helena Bonham Carter) turns up to provide some assistance, some explosives, and some revision of her earlier advice to Enola to rely only on herself. But it turns out that her case may be connected to the one her brother is working on. Enola is determined to be independent and has a hard time admitting she needs help. The direction and editing match the lively personality of the heroine, and the mystery has several delightful twists. Potential clients may underestimate Enola, but so do the people she is investigating. She can go undercover with Bessie as a new employee in the match factory where Sarah worked before she disappeared. There are advantages to Enola’s youth and gender. Some just get to the point: “Might your brother be free?” And then a young girl named Bessie ( Serrana Su-Ling Bliss) comes into the office looking for her sister Sarah. Potential clients say she is too young or mistake her for the receptionist. I would be his equal, worthy of the Holmes name, or so I thought.” “I was going to join the pantheon of great Victorian detectives. “Perhaps I should explain.”Īnd then we rewind to go back a bit, with Enola trying to establish her detective agency in London. She stops to address us, as she does with great charm and wit throughout. The first we see in this film is her back and then her feet and the hems of her skirt and petticoat as she is racing through the London streets, being chased by two Bobbies. She also has enormous courage, both physical and moral. She is observant and determined, and she has great fighting skills and a good command of mechanical physics. She is her person, less analytical than he is and much more empathetic. ![]() ![]() The mystery at its center is inspired by a real-life event that is genuinely inspiring.Įnola is not a younger female version of her older brother, who, in this version, has the deductive ability of the Arthur Conan Doyle books but is younger and not as well established as in the books. The character has a better sense of who she is, and the movie spends less time explaining, and more time on action. Enola Holmes (Millie Bobby Brown), the younger sister of Sherlock Holmes ( Henry Cavill), returns in this cheeky, breezy sequel that's better than the original. ![]()
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