The Best Sherlock Holmes Movies and TV Shows By Release Order
100 years after 1922’s Sherlock Holmes, the watershed movie that proved Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s character a Hollywood leading man, the detective remains on the case! He’s been adapted to movies and TV countless times, and we’ve organized all of his works which got a Tomatometer score in chronological order. That includes films from Basil Rathbone’s defining decades-long run accessorized with the deerstalker hat, Robert Downey Jr.’s blockbuster take, and Sherlock‘s modern spin with Benedict Cumberbatch. To complete the picture, Holmes-adjacent works are included, including Gene Wilder’s The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes’ Smarter Brother, Disney’s The Great Mouse Detective, and Netflix’s Enola Holmes, featuring Sherlock’s teenage sister as played by Millie Bobby Brown. Now let’s chase the thread through this study in scarlet tomatoes, as we reveal the best (and worst) Sherlock Holmes movies and series. —Alex Vo
Synopsis: While investigating a secretive group of aristocrats, Sherlock Holmes (Reginald Owen) and Dr. Watson (Warburton Gamble) must contend with a [More]
Synopsis: Sherlock Holmes (Basil Rathbone) is intrigued by a centuries-old legend in which every generation of the wealthy Baskerville family is [More]
Synopsis: Sherlock Holmes (Basil Rathbone) and Dr. Watson (Nigel Bruce) square off against their archenemy, Professor Moriarty (George Zucco), who has [More]
Synopsis: Sigerson Holmes (Gene Wilder) has something to prove as the lesser-known brother of famed detective Sherlock Holmes. When Sherlock and [More]
Synopsis: In this bizarre twist on Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's classic detective tales, Sherlock Holmes (Nicol Williamson) finds himself experiencing vivid [More]
Synopsis: After learning of mass murderer Jack the Ripper's gruesome reign of terror, private detective Sherlock Holmes (Christopher Plummer) decides to [More]
Critics Consensus:Young Sherlock Holmes is a charming, if unnecessarily flashy, take on the master sleuth.
Synopsis: A teenage Sherlock Holmes (Nicholas Rowe) meets and befriends his future sidekick, the bemused and bespectacled John Watson (Alan Cox). [More]
Critics Consensus: The Great Mouse Detective may not rank with Disney's classics, but it's an amiable, entertaining picture with some stylishly dark visuals.
Synopsis: Rodent supersleuth Basil and his bumbling partner must thwart evil Ratigan's plot to depose the Mouse Queen. [More]
Critics Consensus: Guy Ritchie's directorial style might not be quite the best fit for an update on the legendary detective, but Sherlock Holmes benefits from the elementary appeal of a strong performance by Robert Downey, Jr.
Synopsis: When a string of brutal murders terrorizes London, it doesn't take long for legendary detective Sherlock Holmes (Robert Downey Jr.) [More]
Critics Consensus:Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows is a good yarn thanks to its well-matched leading men but overall stumbles duplicating the well-oiled thrills of the original.
Synopsis: When Austria's crown prince is found dead, evidence seems to point to suicide. However, detective Sherlock Holmes (Robert Downey Jr.) [More]
Critics Consensus:Mr. Holmes focuses on the man behind the mysteries, and while it may lack Baker Street thrills, it more than compensates with tenderly wrought, well-acted drama.
Synopsis: Long-retired and near the end of his life, Sherlock Holmes (Ian McKellen) grapples with an unreliable memory and must rely [More]
Critics Consensus: The lowest and vilest alleys in London do not present a more dreadful record of the adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson than does Holmes and Watson.
Synopsis: Detective Sherlock Holmes and Dr. John Watson join forces to investigate a mysterious murder at Buckingham Palace. It seems like [More]
Critics Consensus:Enola Holmes brings a breath of fresh air to Baker Street -- and leaves plenty of room for Millie Bobby Brown to put her effervescent stamp on a franchise in waiting.
Synopsis: While searching for her missing mother, intrepid teen Enola Holmes uses her sleuthing skills to outsmart big brother Sherlock and [More]
Critics Consensus: Building on its predecessor with boisterously entertaining flair, Enola Holmes 2 solves the mystery of how to make a satisfying sequel -- and makes it look positively elementary.
Synopsis: Fresh off the triumph of solving her first case, Enola Holmes (Millie Bobby Brown) follows in the footsteps of her [More]
With The Nice Guys, writer/director Shane Black returns to the volatile buddy-cop template that defined his early writing career with hits like Lethal Weapon, The Last Boy Scout, and The Long Kiss Goodnight. Ryan Gosling is one-half of said Nice Guys, a down-on-his-luck detective in the ’70s and his whole steez inspires this week’s 24 Frames gallery: the wackiest private eyes ever to grace film and television.
Robert Downey Jr. as Sherlock Holmes nails the idea that his constantly “on” brain, roving eyes, and whirling motor mouth is as much as a curse as it is popcorn entertainment.
Jim Carrey’s first major movie role was Ace Ventura: Pet Detective and he spends most of it with his face hidden away, talking out of his ass. What a selfless actor!
Inspector Clouseau: Peter Sellers played the bumbling Pink Panther detective in the ’60s and ’70s, before Steve Martin took on the role for a reboot and a sequel starting in 2006.
The Adam West version of Batman, this Spandex’d deducer of truth, was always able to pin any number of Gotham villains to the scene of the crime even off the most threadbare clues.
Tony Shalhoub is Adrian Monk (of the titular TV show), an inspector working out of San Francisco whose debilitating obsessive-compulsive disorder stymies his efforts to catch the perps.
Need an incompetent upright talking crustacean to take on the case and eat all the clues out of desperate hunger? Why not Zoidberg?
From the files of Police Squad! to the big screen shenanigans of the Naked Gun movies, Leslie Nielsen plays Frank Drebin as a bumbling detective whose best weapons are goofy sight gags and absurd one-liners.
Angie Tribeca: Rashida Jones and Hayes MacArthur play a pair of mismatched cops in this off-the-wall police procedural spoof inspired by the likes of Police Squad! and Sledge Hammer.
True Detective: Matthew McConnaughey’s detective Rust Cohle is probably the last person you want to road trip with, unless you’re into endless metaphysical ruminations, residual psychedelic hallucinations, and beer can sculpture.
Martin Mull plays Gene Parmesan, a thoroughly incompetent (this being Arrested Development after all) detective-for-hire whose lousy disguises nonetheless brought unbridled joy to Lucille Bluth.
Scooby-Doo: The teenage sleuths of Mystery, Inc. are actually pretty good — they nab a perp every episode — but it’s a little unclear what a munchie-obsessed Great Dane with a speech impediment actually brings to each investigation.
Having a lot of super cool tools at your disposal is great if you’re a P.I., but it helps if you’re not a complete ditz. Thankfully, Inspector Gadget has a whiz-kid niece with a supersmart pup to bail him out of trouble every time his helicopter hat malfunctions.
Mystery Team is a Hardy Boys-esque raunchy parody that envisions naive sleuths who grew up but never put in a day of maturing.
Before he became railroad engineer and rode his train tp hell and back, Buster Keaton boned up on silent-era sleuthing in 1924’s Sherlock Jr.
Sledge Hammer!: How do you solve every case at once? Do what Sledge did at the end of Season 1 and blow up the city with a nuke. Boom, no mysteries ever again.
Duckman: An irascible, sexist, perverted quack of a detective who regularly botches the simplest cases. But his wife is dead, so you gotta sympathize, you know?
It was at Val Kilmer’s insistence that his character in Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (also written/directed by Shane Black) go gay (Gay Perry’s his name, in fact), inserting kissing shots with Robert Downey Jr. to jar the audience.
The Michael Richards Show: Short-lived, post-Seinfeld series starring Richards as an effective but unorthodox detective (carrying over some clumsy Kramer mannerisms).
Andy Barker, P.I.: An even more short-lived series starring Conan sidekick Andy Richter as a public accountant who is foisted into the crime-solving world after being mistaken for a private eye.
The Long Goodbye: Re-purposing a Raymond Chandler icon for the ’70s, Elliott Gould’s take on Philip Marlowe proves murky, quirky, and cool as jazz.
I Heart Huckabees: Dustin Hoffman and Lily Tomlin star as “existential” private eyes, people who are hired to unravel lives and direct clients towards a purpose in life.
In Zero Effect, Bill Pullman stars as Daryl Zero, an awkward but genius detective whose interpersonal skills are so lousy, all clients speak to him through Zero’s assistant (Ben Stiller).
The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes’ Smarter Brother: Gene Wilder stars (while writing and directing) as Sigerson, the unambitious but suddenly jealous younger sibling of the world-famous detective, and sets out to outmatch him.
Just one more thing… Here’s Peter Falk as Columbo, the rumpled and deceptively scattered L.A. detective who entertained TV audiences for decades.