"It is also known by the alternative titles Prelude to Murder (working title) and Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Code in the United Kingdom. Dressed to Kill." - wokipedia
Not trying to deceive. Not sure why the titles were changed when we colorized them 15+ years ago. May have been for legal reasons? But I will add (Dressed to Kill) in the title name so people are informed. Thank you for the feedback!
@@LegendFilmsIncPrelude to Murder working title aka Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Code in the UK 😊 Dressed to Kill released title in the US 😮 confusing isn't it 😂
Probably the worst rendition of holmes/watson ever done.The writers totally fail to reproduce the books. watson is portrayed as a bumbling unintelligent fool which he was not.holmes is equally poorly acted.....totally pathetic.
Not sure why the titles were changed when we colorized these Sherlock films 15+ years ago. May have been for legal reasons? But I will add (Dressed to Kill) in the title name so people are informed. Thank you for the feedback!
Not trying to deceive. Not sure why the titles were changed when we colorized them 15+ years ago. May have been for legal reasons? But I will add (Dressed to Kill) in the title name so people are informed. Thank you for the feedback!
Personally, I am so GRATEFUL for colorizing of B&W films and photos… because I LOVE old films, but I HATE watching B&W. (It has to be something “pretty special” for me to manage to make it to the end of a B&W film.) And truthfully - when folks say that colorizing then changes the original filmmakers’ intent? The original filmmakers DIDN’T have a choice but to use B&W film. If they HAD had a choice, most of the B&W films would’ve been filmed in color originally… especially the lavish musicals and adventure films with grand panoramic scenery. (There is an exception to this line of thinking, of course, for the darkly atmospheric films which used the B&W lighting to their advantage - monster flicks and Film Noir… Those films are definitely best left alone.)
We agree. We only colorized movies that would have been in color if the technology was there. People always ask why we didn't colorize Casablanca... we didn't because they CHOSE to film in black and white when color was already available. When we could, we actually worked with people in the movie to find out what may have been the desired colors. We worked closely with Shirley Temple Black when colorizing all the movies she was in and she would tell us what color dress she was wearing, etc. Thank you for the comment!
Films shot in Black & White were set up for monochrome: set decoration, costume choices, lighting settings, even the type of film stock used were all designed to get the best result in Black & White. Colouring these things just panders to the Spoiled Brat mentality who think anything over ten years old should be destroyed, and just looks entirely wrong!