I Accuse-Unmasking The
Sherlock Holmes Legend, Part VIII-“Bumbling Down The Primrose Lane”-Basil
Rathbone and Nigel Bruce’s “The Woman In Green” (1945)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Bruce Conan
The Woman In Green,
starring Lanny Lamont (aka Basil Rathbone aka Sherlock Holmes, aka a million
other aliases to be discussed below), the Fixer man (aka John Watson, MD, aka
John Watkins, aka Nigel Bruce also to be discussed below), 1945
Okay no more Mister Nice
Guy, no more trying to be reasonable with these felons, miscreants, dopesters,
grifters, grafters, con men, whores, pimps and murderers of the nefarious group
the Baker Street Irregulars who work out of London town as far as I know but
who seemingly have tentacles all over the world, or at least to the United
States where they have attempted to hunt me down. Apparently they have
something of a central committee, or organizing center, the notorious Kit Kat
Club a known hang-out for degenerates and riff-raff of all sorts who people the
tables at the place and have ever since King George III’s day. Now that my
family is finally safe and beyond the reach of these craven fiends I can take
off the kid gloves, can reveal what everybody knows by now and which these
Irregulars fear to become public knowledge. Their idol Lanny Lamont (really
their idle if you think about how little detective work he actually did once he
turned over the hard dirty work to the real if corrupt coppers at Scotland
Yard) aka Basil Rathbone aka Sherlock Holmes is an impostor, nothing but a
parlor pink amateur sleuth that even Agatha Christie laughed at without
embarrassment. Him and his buddy Doc Watson aka Doc Fixer Man were a great deal
more than roommates, were the stately queens of England if you get my drift.
I have been chastised,
berated, called a political Neanderthal, a homophobe and that is just the nice
things by what I can only consider is a slander/libel campaign run by the
Irregulars to dismiss me and my fact-driven contentions. That alone tells me I
am on to something since this Irregular cohort is made up of those who are the
most degenerate devotees of the Lamont legend, those who are into unspeakable
blood rituals in order to sate their unholy desires (as is standard operating
procedure now that I have uncovered his real identity after great efforts
refuse to call him anything but his given name Lanny Lamont born in the West
End slums of London to an unwed mother who attempted to abandon him at birth).
I have decided in any
case to take on the legend hereafter strictly on the basis of competence, of
ability to do private detection and will leave out further reference to the
unholy and then scandalous relationship, the “sin that dare not speak its name”
between these two, ah, roommates. That means that I will give up all the proof I
directly gathered from the archival journals of the Kit Kat Club that they were
members in good standing of that hell-hole nefarious operation and almost
bankrupted the place with their fiendish opium habits and their unbridled
unnatural lusts. So be it.
Finding the real name,
that Lanny Lamont name on the birth certificate though I cannot give up since
that really is the initial lynchpin for what seemed totally wrong from the
beginning about this brittle character who went by a million names (Basil
Rathbone, like that moniker could be a real name be serious, Lytton Strachey,
Sailor Jack when he was plying the trade among the rough waterfront sailors,
Benny Worth, Harry Smyth, not Smith, and a half dozen others). Claimed to be a
private detective. I looked up the International Private Detection Association
membership lists and the London private detective licensing lists from the
1920s to the 1950s. No Lanny Lamont or any of the other aliases, nothing. I did
find a Lanny Lamont who served time in Dartmoor Prison in the 1930s for drug
trafficking, assault, carrying a concealed weapon and a raft of other minor
charges. (Also made the connection of how Lanny and Fixer Man met, by the way
the only other name I found on him was John Watkins, having met in Dartmoor
when he was serving a long stretch for practicing medicine without a license,
performing illegal abortions, selling illegal drugs, and sodomy.) The clincher
though was a thorough run through all the London telephone directories for
those years (a task that will be harder to do with all the singular cellphone
use now and in the future).Yeah you guessed it no Lanny or any other name.
Nowhere. And certainly not on Baker Street his, their last known address. An
old lady had lived in his claimed residence by herself since her husband died
during most of that time.
I could go on with all the
lies and deceit but I said that I would take Lanny on his own ground, take him
apart as a parlor pink amateur detective that a kid like Jimmy Olson who is
just starting could beat six ways to Sunday on a case and have time for lunch
and a nap. Take this Women in Green
case where this fraud tried to take down heroic Professor Moriarty, tried to
pin the so-called ‘finger” murders on that much maligned man. First off Lanny
and Fixer Man were so stoned out of their gourds for weeks at a time that they
did not know thing number one about the “finger” murder spree until it had
grabbed four young innocent random women in its net. Sat around swilling booze
when he could have nailed somebody for the job pretty quickly even if he had to
fake the evidence. Pin it naturally on a woman and just as naturally a good
looking blonde who looked like she liked to get under the silky sheets without
too much effort. Of course Lanny could have cared less about running that route
but he just let the bodies pile up like a cord of wood until he got done with
his high.
While every detective
private or public, was on this case to protect womanhood if nothing else Lanny
waited for the daughter of one of the guys who thought he had murdered a young
woman to show up at his door. Had the tell-tale surgically sawed off finger in
a box in his pocket. Five down, make it six when that guy took the fall. That
woke Lanny up a little, not Fixer Man though he persisted on a landudum high
until Lanny was in danger of falling of a roof and then he started crying for
his man. After what seemed like six months Lanny finally had an idea-finally
figured that somebody was manipulating the killers somehow-although how was a
book sealed with seven seals. Then one of the guys who was sent to kill Fixer Man
(it was probably a busted drug deal but the case went into cold case history
and was never solved) screwed up and Lanny finally caught on. The guys were
hypnotized and the “finger” in the box in their pockets was to blackmail them
when they couldn’t figure out whether they had killed the young woman that
belonged to the finger or not.
Naturally Lanny’s number
one suspect was much put upon Professor Moriarty since they were sworn enemies
since Kit Kat Club days when the good Professor “took” some guy away from Lanny
according to an old-time reprobate member who remembers those battles for the
young guys which were fierce. Lanny confronted the Professor but he blew Lanny
off with the suggestion that he will take the Fixer Man away from him. Lanny in
terror backs off. The long and short of it is that Lanny never really was able
to pin the murders on the Professor who had an alibi any way that he had been
in Scotland. Here is what Lanny never figured, never thought through. What
about the blonde dish, what about maybe she had something to do with it. She
had after all been seen right in the Pembroke Club with the last murderer where
he was sucking up scotches. Not until the bodies were sky high did he take a
run in that direction. And didn’t, I repeat didn’t, like any red-blooded
private detective from the 1940s take a run at her under the sheets before
turning her over. Let Scotland Yard take the tough collar while he pranced
around in exotic drug high. Yeah, a fake and fraud. Where is Sam Spade when you
need him.
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