
He can see it all more clearly in his mind, dissecting every detail, stopping the flow of past events to analyze what might have happened or what he might have done about it.
A tragedy of his youth, a covert meeting he didn’t attend, a body hanging from a light fixture, a brawl that might have distracted lesser minds and confused less magical memories all are subject to the total recall of one Sherlock Holmes, even before he settled in on Baker Street.
Amazon gets in on the extended Holmes family business with “Young Sherlock,” because why should “Enola Holmes” on Netflix or the Spielberg production of “Young Sherlock Holmes” back in the ’80s have all the glory? To say nothing of the British Benedict Cumberbatch TV series aired on PBS a few years back.
The new series is based on Andrew Lanes’ novels about the teen years of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s dapper, dogged detective in the making. And as the director of the Robert Downey Jr. bi screen “Sherlocks” Guy Ritchie developed this project and directed a bit of it, the series has its share of Guy Ritchie sizzle and flash.
They spent their period piece money on actors, costumes, rented Victorian settings, editing and effects. Their narrative diverges just enough from the Holmes of lore and other adaptations to at least appear new and novel, with Hero Fiennes Tiffin taking us through the troubled late teens of our detective in a tale that’s dark, but often jaunty.
Natasha McElhone (“Ronin”), Hero’s uncle Joseph Fiennes (“Shakespeare in Love”), Max Irons (son of Jeremy) and Oscar winner Colin Firth co-star.
The big twist? There’ll be no fated meeting with a future “Doctor Watson” here. This “disgraced” Holmes is fresh out of prison and willing to befriend any Oxford swell who takes an interest, even the brilliant, profane Jewish outsider in the student ranks, James Moriarty. Dónal Finn of TV’s “The Wheel of Time” gives our “Ashkenazi” anti-hero an Irish brogue and swagger, making him Holmes’ intellectual equal — “I’m no sidekick!” — and a young man far better at the bareknuckle brawling and fights to the death they face together.
Because someone is killing Oxford dons. Someone has tried to kidnap a Chinese princess (Zine Tseng), whose martial arts and horsewomanship skills wouldn’t allow that. And somehow, that might tie into Holmes’ family history — his absentee scientist father (Joseph Fiennes) and his mentally institutionalized mother (McElhone).
“The game’s afoot” over eight episodes of chases, shootouts, beatings and bodies, with Holmes trotting out that magical Eidetic memory and walking through scenes and events, picking at details from half-glimpsed, half-burned notes in a fireplace, clues from the work brother Mycroft (Irons) is doing for a rich, vain and ruthless industrialist (Firth), always one step ahead of the not-wholly-hapless Constable Lestrade (Scott Reid).
Holmes speaks fluent Mandarin, which comes in handy as events back in China that entangle our student princess tie into all this.
The 19th century settings are a tad pristine and unlived in for my taste. Digital cityscapes — Oxford, London, Paris and Constantinople — were worth investing in. Gadgets (Mr. Edison’s phonograph) are unveiled and turned to evil purpose. But no money or screen time is wasted on trains to the Orient or steamship passages across the Channel.
The eight episodes clip along, with somewitty banter, some repetition and the odd clever shot or editing touch and more and more pondering of the childhood tragedy that shaped Holmes. The back-engineering of this prequel is merely adequate. The fictive 1880s “present day” story is muddled and turns muddier the deeper we get into it.
And I’d swear I heard a character talk about “King and country,” which is a curious blunder for a Victorian Era story filmed in the UK to make.
Label this one a streaming page-turner, not quite up to a cliff-hanger, episode by episode, just engrossing enough to keep us engaged.
Rating: TV-14, violence, profanity
Cast: Hero Fiennes Tiffin, Dónal Finn, Natasha McElhone, Zine Tseng, Max Irons, Holly Cattle, Numan Acar, Ravi Aujla, Scott Reid, Joseph Fiennes and Colin Firth.
Credits: Created and developed by Peter Harness, Matthew Parkhill and Guy Ritchie, inspired by Andrew Lanes’ “Young Sherlock Holmes” novels. An Amazon Prime release.
Running time: 8 episodes :52-55 minutes each




























