The Masks of Death
The Masks of Death is a 1984 British mystery television film directed by Roy Ward Baker and starring Peter Cushing as Sherlock Holmes and John Mills as Doctor Watson.
Plot
In 1913, Sherlock Holmes, virtually in retirement, is persuaded by Inspector Alec MacDonald of Scotland Yard to take on a baffling case. Three dead bodies have been found in London's East End, all with no discernible cause of death, but the expressions on their faces suggest that they all died in a state of terror.Holmes, accompanied by Dr Watson, begins an investigation, but before he can make any real progress he is visited by the British Home Secretary and a German Diplomat, Count Udo von Felseck, who tell Holmes that a German envoy, on a secret mission to Britain, has disappeared from Felseck's house in Buckinghamshire. Unless Holmes can track him down, war between the two countries will become imminent. Holmes considers the possibility that the two matters are related and that someone is not telling him the truth.
Cast
- Peter Cushing as Sherlock Holmes
- John Mills as Doctor Watson
- Anne Baxter as Irene Adler
- Ray Milland as Home Secretary
- Anton Diffring as Count Udo von Felseck
- Gordon Jackson as Inspector Alec MacDonald
- Susan Penhaligon as Miss Derwent
- Marcus Gilbert as Anton von Felseck
- Jenny Laird as Mrs. Hudson
- Russell Hunter as Alfred Coombs
- James Cossins as Frederick Baines
- Eric Dodson as Lord Claremont
- Georgina Coombs as Lady Claremont
- Dominic St Clair as Boot Boy
Production
Development
Executive producer Kevin Francis had previously attempted to raise funds for a new version of The Hound of the Baskervilles. Francis intended to cast Peter Cushing as Holmes, which would be Cushing's third take on the Doyle tale after the 1959 Hammer production and the two-part production for the 1968 television series, and feature a stop-motion dog created by Ray Harryhausen.While funding for the proposed film collapsed, it led to Francis discussing an original tale with writer Anthony Hinds.