#CinemaJourney
#Sherlock & Daughter
#Sherlock & Daughter
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FunTranscript
00:00The Thread would have killed me long ago were I not somehow vital to their success.
00:05Mr. Sherlock Holmes.
00:07Welcome.
00:08Thank you, Prime Minister.
00:09Someone at Chief Inspector Whitlock's office immediately rang up Lord Witherssey.
00:13Warning him he was about to welcome Watson and Mrs. Hudson, not to mention the Ambassador's jewels.
00:17Unless I find the jewels by tomorrow afternoon, the Ambassador collects 50,000 pounds.
00:23The kidnappers must communicate with each other and then Watson and Mrs. Hudson will once more be on the move.
00:30Our allies and friends are already strategically placed and I will light up the sky with two signals.
00:36One colour representing where Watson and Mrs. Hudson have been kept and the other colour representing where they are going.
00:43Prepare to write a warrant for it.
00:45What do you call it?
00:47A wiretap, my lord.
00:48I can hear and record every conversation from the telephone of the Chief Inspector.
00:52Now, go upstairs and provoke your superiors.
01:08No call yet, sir?
01:09No.
01:10The person using the telephone must wait to be alone in Whitlock's office.
01:14How long will that take, sir?
01:15Not long.
01:15The time frame I gave was designed to eliminate the possibilities of a messenger.
01:20Are you in danger, sir?
01:21No, no, no, no, no.
01:23It's not my safety at risk, but the lives of those I hold most dear.
01:27If I am wrong, if the culprit employing the telephone in Whitlock's office does not use it again,
01:33if we have nothing to record, then my trap springs shut on the wind.
01:38And my friends, my dearest friends, could die.
01:40I believe a cobbler can be found in Kensington.
02:07Quickly.
02:08The hostages are travelling from the Dowager Duchess of Lincolnshire, Green, which is where Shaw and the Irregulars are stationed,
02:20to Kensington, the Duke of Leicester, Yellow, where they'll have to pass by 30.
02:27Now, excuse me, Shaw, I haven't a second to lose.
02:31But, sir, what should I do?
02:32Just continue recording the calls and pray that there is no change of plan.
02:37Wish me luck, Swann.
02:38But, sir, what do you see here?
02:51Let's go.
03:21Green boys, look ahead.
03:31That's us.
03:39Two peridors.
03:40They may split them up.
03:41Half and half, lads.
03:42You two take the second one, all right?
03:44Come on.
03:51That's the one.
04:11Head to the Duke of Leicester.
04:13That's it, Mr. Hannigan.
04:14Let's go.
04:14Get out of here.
04:44Take the yellow moon to the Duke of Leicester.
05:09Time is of the essence, Danquith.
05:21Certainly so.
05:30Let's wear carriage.
05:32Let's go.
05:32Get after him.
05:34Is this it?
05:48Come on.
05:49Let's go.
05:50Let's go.
06:10Let's go.
06:12Come on! Keep going!
06:22Almost there!
06:24Keep going! Keep going!
06:33Don't take the drive.
06:35Look to the hostages.
06:37It's my sister!
06:39Let me miss it.
06:40Okay.
06:40It won't budge.
06:45Let me in there.
06:52Ah! Holmes!
06:54How kind of you to join us.
06:56Thank you for following my instructions so closely.
06:58Two carriages. My God.
07:01Clever but not clever enough.
07:02Come on.
07:05Is it Mr. Holmes?
07:06Oh, no, no, no.
07:08I must be dreaming.
07:09Everyone seems to be floating there, May.
07:13Steady, Mrs. Hudson. Steady.
07:15Oh, sister.
07:17Dear sister.
07:17Tell Mrs. Hudson to my carriage.
07:19Take great care.
07:20She's been heavily dosed with opium.
07:29All right.
07:30Watson.
07:31Come on, Shaw.
07:33Get this open.
07:34Come on!
07:35Holmes!
07:36Holmes!
07:37Holmes!
07:38Holmes!
07:39Oh, yes!
07:40Ah!
07:41What?
07:42You found it.
07:43Yes, of course.
07:44I knew you would.
07:45Of course.
07:46You've been very heavily sedated.
07:47Yes.
07:48We'll get you home.
07:49Yes.
07:50Then you can have a proper rest.
07:51No, no, no.
07:52Yes.
07:53No, no, no, no.
07:54The gold.
07:55The banking, the rob...
07:56Robbing the bank of England.
07:57What?
07:58They may have done it already.
07:59Who?
08:00I'm going to fall.
08:01What?
08:02Oh, no.
08:03Oh, no.
08:04Holmes!
08:05Take it.
08:06Take it.
08:07It's Mike Harris.
08:08Well, well, well, well.
08:09Come on.
08:10All right.
08:11One.
08:12There we go.
08:13Lady Violet, how may I help you?
08:34I must speak with the ambassador.
08:36Despite the lateness of the hour, my husband is still at the embassy.
08:39Would you care to leave a message?
08:41Sorry for the inconvenience, but I must wait for his return.
08:45Then may I use your telephone?
08:47I need to make an important call to Scotland Yard.
09:00Chief Inspector Whitlock here.
09:01To whom am I speaking, please?
09:02Your batters, that's who.
09:04And I have a serious problem.
09:06I have already solved quite a few of your problems, Lady Violet,
09:09including those related to the less-than-accidental death
09:12of one of your debutantes.
09:14Your taste for violence has become...
09:16I am in no mood for a lecture on morality,
09:19especially from a man who has been so handsomely rewarded for betraying the law.
09:24If you wish to escape with your prize, you'll continue to assist me.
09:28Assist you?
09:29How?
09:30With that awful girl, Amelia Rojas.
09:34The American ambassador insisted I place in his household.
09:38She knows I have the designs to her mother's weapon.
09:41I want her out of the way.
09:43Your hatred of this girl is a distraction from Holmes whom you continue to underestimate.
09:49I have been right about Sherlock so far.
09:53But the girl is more unpredictable and so a threat.
09:56I am presently involved in the most delicate part of our entire enterprise,
10:01and Holmes must not suspect that he is being led to do our bidding.
10:04His arrogance won't allow him to suspect.
10:07And as for the girl, have one of your idiot inspectors pick her up and taken care of in prison,
10:13like he did with Charlie the coachman.
10:15There is nothing I can do to remove the girl while she is at the ambassador's residence.
10:20Very well.
10:22At my first opportunity, I will kill her myself.
10:43Shh.
10:44Keep quiet.
10:48You scared me half to death.
10:50I'm sorry.
10:51I couldn't go through the front door.
10:52Why?
10:53Because it's so late?
10:54No.
10:55It's not the hour.
10:56Although I'd have some explaining to do if the Pinkertons had seen me.
10:59Does the lateness of your return have anything to do with Mr. Wiley?
11:02No.
11:03No.
11:04Shh.
11:05Not at all, actually.
11:06It's...
11:08Clara, listen to me, okay?
11:10The person who planned my kidnapping and yours, who killed Emma and murdered my mother,
11:17is downstairs right now in your father's study.
11:21Who on earth are you talking about?
11:23Lady Violet Somerset arrived two hours ago and insisted on waiting for you
11:27and helped herself to our telephone.
11:29But what could she possibly want?
11:30It's quite nearly morning.
11:31The sooner I talk with her, the faster she will leave.
11:35If there's a problem, my darling, if she's causing you distress...
11:39Nothing beyond this inexcusable intrusion, which will soon be over.
11:52At last!
11:55Your behavior grows more reckless by the hour.
11:58And your tone more presumptuous.
12:00You may rank high in London society, but you hold no position of legitimate power.
12:06Whereas I am the United States Ambassador to the Court of St. James,
12:10and the legal representative of my nation in Great Britain.
12:13I am well aware of your status.
12:15Indeed, I consider you to be one of my most valuable employees.
12:19Your... employee?
12:21You may not wear my livery, but of no doubt you are my servant.
12:25And on the verge of receiving an extraordinary reward for your labors,
12:29by this time tomorrow I will have made you a hero to the public,
12:32and one of the richest men in the world.
12:34One of the rich.
12:35May I remind you that the plan we are about to execute is mine.
12:40If not for me, the success of your conspiracy would have, at best,
12:44left the country you wish to dominate in financial ruin.
12:47I admit you finessed bribing the authorities with genius,
12:51and your change in what the robbery should accomplish was uncommonly clever,
12:55but I chose you.
12:56I came all the way to America,
12:58under the pretense of helping your daughter,
13:00because I recognized that despite conspicuous failures,
13:04you had the will, the means, and immunity
13:07to accomplish what none of the rest of us could.
13:09So that you should attempt to interfere with selling this weapon
13:14when you know how important it is to my ultimate goal.
13:18I find it disloyal, to say the very least.
13:20Especially as I created a date for your daughter's ball
13:24at the cost of someone's life.
13:26Which was done without my knowledge or consent.
13:30You promised no murders,
13:32and now there have been bodies piling up beyond count.
13:35So no, I will not allow Clara's ball or my embassy
13:39to be used as an auction house for weapons.
13:42There's no more perfect place or occasion for this sale to take place.
13:47Every foreign diplomat in London may attend the ball
13:50without attracting suspicion.
13:52The actual exchange will be made discreetly in your stables.
13:57Perhaps I misled you a little about killing people,
14:00but I never denied our ultimate aim.
14:02Think, please.
14:04This is no ordinary weapon.
14:06You could decide the outcome of this war.
14:08You seem so determined to start.
14:10Do you really have so little feeling for your own country?
14:14Don't be naive.
14:16This war will not be won on a field of battle.
14:20Indeed, the victors have already been crowned.
14:23They rule our boardrooms, banks, and foundries.
14:27By the day of surrender without knowing it,
14:29England will have been subsumed by industry,
14:32and the financial system by which I must live a beggar
14:36in my own family will come to an end.
14:39You say I have no feeling for my country.
14:42It is my country that has no feeling for me!
14:45This is not the future Dan Moriarty espouses.
14:49Well, he is ridiculous.
14:51And, like Holmes, will have soon served his purpose.
14:54The thread can dispense with them both.
14:57And the wretched girl, too.
14:59How you start your war and what you hope it will accomplish
15:03is up to you and your other bloody-minded accomplices.
15:07But that wretched girl is under my personal protection,
15:12which I will not withdraw.
15:14Oh, really?
15:17Have you forgotten all about Clara's romance
15:19with your former coachman?
15:21You encouraged his advances,
15:23and taking my daughter hostage
15:25was both a betrayal and an outrage.
15:27Had you given me the keys,
15:29when I asked your daughter's seduction
15:31would have been unnecessary.
15:33You forced my hand.
15:35If you do so again, well,
15:37diplomatic immunity might keep you from an arrest.
15:41But nothing can protect you from a scandal like that.
15:45Do you ever wonder, Lady Violet,
15:48if you might be in over your head?
15:51I have outmaneuvered even Sherlock Holmes.
15:59You are no such challenge.
16:02Hopefully wealth and universal adulation
16:05will soften your outrage.
16:07Hide this well.
16:10Bring it with you to Clara's ball.
16:15Or your daughter's introduction to society
16:19will be the last night she appears in public.
16:29That wick wants to destroy me.
16:33She can't.
16:35The keys she was talking about,
16:37they have to be used at your debut.
16:39What do they unlock?
16:40Here I am,
16:41worried about my own future,
16:42while Lady Violet plots your murder.
16:45It's not just my life that's being threatened.
16:47It's Mr. Holmes's two.
16:48And a war?
16:49I can't believe it.
16:50Why would Lady Violet want to start a war?
16:53Amelia, where are you going?
16:55To get the answers to your questions.
16:57And to make dead certain that nothing happens to you,
16:59Michael Wiley,
17:00or to Mr. Holmes.
17:02Take care.
17:03I now fear Lady Violet more than anything.
17:07You're not wrong.
17:09Wish me luck.
17:19Miss Rojas?
17:21Detective Swan?
17:22Sorry to startle you.
17:24What are you doing here?
17:25I've come to tell you,
17:26you're in great danger.
17:28And I must protect you until morning.
17:32The effects of the opium will wear off soon.
17:37But they should fully recover.
17:40When they come round,
17:42I advise fresh water,
17:43some warm soup,
17:45and a long hot bath.
17:47Thank you, Dr. Wells.
17:50Mr. and Mrs. Halligan,
17:52I will leave our patients in your care
17:54whilst I follow the scent.
17:56Not to worry, Holmes.
17:57We'll run these kidnappers to ground.
18:00I'm sure you will.
18:01But I must now turn my attention to the robbery of a significant amount of gold from the Bank of England.
18:07I do not know how you came to be aware of it.
18:10The transfer of the South African gold from the walls to the bank was accomplished in complete secrecy.
18:16Boulevard supervised its transfer yesterday.
18:19And even if thieves could break into the bank,
18:21I mean, how would they escape at 8,000 ounces of solid gold?
18:25An excellent question, Boulevard.
18:27And I must ask the Bank of England to open their vault in order to answer it.
18:31If you'll excuse me, I fear I may already be too late.
18:35Ah! Mr. Holmes. I hope you'll allow us to accompany you. If your charges are true, we must immediately join in the pursuit.
18:44For which I presume the reporter and the photographer standing behind you are indispensable.
18:50Well, if circumstances allow, we must immediately alert the public.
18:54The Daily Chronicle was convinced to hold off on the mid-morning edition should our news require the front page.
18:59Well, I would have spared the yard such a salacious expose, but as you will.
19:18Dear me, Mr. Holmes. Your alarms have us terrified and perplexed.
19:23This shipment of South African gold is essential to the bank's capital reserves.
19:32Without it, markets would collapse across the empire.
19:36I must hope you are wrong, Mr. Holmes.
19:40I assure you, Governor Kavanagh, nothing would give me more pleasure.
19:49Oh, thank heavens.
19:53Mr. Holmes, sir, would you mind posing in front of the gold?
20:06What gold?
20:08Well, this gold, from South Africa. Securely transferred from ship to vault under my direct supervision.
20:18May I, Inspector?
20:20Careful, Holmes. It's quite heavy.
20:23Note the fine powder appearing on the bar's exterior indicating soluble salts moving to the surface.
20:30The effects of moisture possibly related to the recent rains.
20:33I trust the powder will have no effect on the value.
20:37No, not at all. The gold will be worth exactly what it was when it was loaded into your vault.
20:43You see, gentlemen, these bars, covering bits of lead, painted a persuasive colour and bearing the proper imprint, are 100% counterfeit.
21:02But how? I saw the gold being broken open out of the crates and tested and unloaded off the ship into a convoy of carriages.
21:11That much is certainly true.
21:12And I drove alongside these carriages all the way from the wharf to the bank.
21:15I believe you.
21:16And I observed the gold being carried into the bank.
21:19Now that that is impossible. The vault was neither opened nor breached. Yet this is not gold. Ergo, the gold was never here.
21:29Now, it was brought from the ships and walked past you by a group of coachmen, all of whom were part of a conspiracy to rob the bank.
21:36They arrived at the wharf in vehicles already filled with counterfeit bars of painted plaster, and the real gold was placed in the carriage's false bottoms.
21:45Now you escorted the gold and these thieving coachmen across London, and upon arrival at the bank, the counterfeit bars were loaded into the vault.
21:53And the real gold was driven away, and where it has gone will take some thought. But that is hardly the most important question.
22:00The whereabouts of the gold is not the most important question.
22:04No, it is not. The most pertinent question is how was I able to envision this crime so quickly?
22:13And with such astonishing accuracy, I am used to making inferences far beyond the scope of untrained minds.
22:20But criminals seldom provide me with such flagrant clues, such as this plaster dust, flecked with gold paint,
22:27left behind in at least two of the carriages used in the robbery.
22:31How did you come across these carriages?
22:33Well, they were engaged again hours later in the relocation of Watson and Mrs. Hudson.
22:38Their coats were caked in gold dust, and we rescued them just in time to be told.
22:42Their captors were robbing the Bank of England. Well, what an amazing coincidence.
22:47Here's another. I was able to have a similar carriage dismantled right after it had been used in the attempted abduction of my former maid,
22:54so I knew about the false buttons.
22:57And I assumed Scotland Yard contracted these vehicles from the Green and Crest Asylum for the criminally insane.
23:05It was an attempt to transport the gold to the vault using unremarkable conveyances.
23:10Yes. No. No, no, no. This cannot be true.
23:15You!
23:32Whoa! Shouldn't I be taking you to Baker Street?
23:35No, I need to find where Michael Wiley works.
23:37Miss Rohat, wait, wait.
23:39Um, ladies cannot enter the exchange. I will go in, find this Michael Wiley, and bring him out to you.
23:45Yeah, but you don't know what he looks like.
23:46You there! Move this carriage away from the...
23:49Scotland Yard!
23:53Your badge could get me inside.
23:57Police business!
23:59Scotland Yard! Out of the way, please! Police business! Scotland Yard! Police business!
24:03Scotland Yard! Officer! Officer!
24:05Amelia, what are you doing here?
24:08Excuse me, officer, but I respectfully ask you to release Miss Rohat immediately.
24:11Well, I can assure you, Mr. Wiley, that my holding of Miss Rohat's wrist was necessary to keep her on the floor of this exchange,
24:17where she insisted upon hunting for you.
24:19It's okay.
24:22I overheard Lady Violet tell the ambassador that she wants to get rid of you. And me.
24:27What does Lady Violet have against us? Did she say?
24:30Maybe it has something to do with your support of Home Rule.
24:33How would she know about that?
24:34Don't ask me, but...
24:36She also wants to start a war.
24:38One pound? It's not possible.
24:44Stock market's crashing.
24:47Stay away from Lady Violet. Let Sherlock Holmes deal with her.
24:50I've got to get back to work.
24:51What is going on?
24:52Well, an epic crime.
24:54The Bank of England has been robbed.
24:56And will probably fail.
24:58We must go now.
25:00I'll take you back to Baker Street on the way to the yard.
25:02No.
25:03If this is really an epic crime, there's only one place Sherlock Holmes would wait.
25:07No.
25:16This conversation you overheard between Lady Violet and the ambassador is most revealing.
25:21Now I know for certain why the jewels are so important and where they've gone.
25:26Where?
25:27Chief Inspector Whitlock, for whom they were always intended as a bribe.
25:31He took over the search for them himself.
25:33And before Lord Withers, he shot himself.
25:36He must have told Whitlock where the gems were to be found.
25:39But what part does the ambassador play in the bank robbery?
25:41And how does he become a public hero?
25:43I don't know, but I can tell you who does.
25:45Chief Inspector Whitlock.
25:47He told you himself.
25:48Every day the Home Office sends me a list of potential revolutionaries, misfits, and former felons.
25:53He must have hired some of them as drivers to steal the gold.
25:56Whitlock brought a reporter and a photographer with him today inside the vault.
26:00Well, maybe he didn't think you'd figure out what happened.
26:03Maybe he wanted to prove he's smarter than Sherlock Holmes.
26:06That's a mistake many have made to their regret.
26:08But consider this.
26:09The Red Thread gave me the means to lay bare the robbery, so...
26:13So?
26:14So should I not also know where the gold has gone?
26:16Why would they want you to find the gold?
26:18Why would they want me to know about the robbery at all?
26:20Okay.
26:21This is...
26:22It's...
26:23It's what you call a theory of the crime.
26:27So how do we prove it?
26:28By locating the gold without looking for it.
26:33Make Whitlock tell us.
26:34He's not only involved with the robbery, but he's also working for Lady Violet.
26:39Swan has a recording of a telephone conversation.
26:43Kill her. Kill her.
26:45So.
26:46Except I promised the Prime Minister nothing from the wiretap would be used in evidence.
26:50Well, Whitlock doesn't know that.
26:53Yes.
26:54Yes, very good idea.
26:55And I will follow up on Whitlock's ignorance of the prompt time, not just yet.
26:58If I am right, we should be able to deduce the gold's whereabouts based on the clues we already have.
27:03Remember, I overheard Lord Withersi and the stables say that the coffins were about to become more valuable.
27:08They're worth less than they will be, a week or two hence.
27:10But Withersi's needs were more immediate.
27:13And besides, you overheard that conversation without his knowledge.
27:17If my theory is correct, all clues left by the red thread must be deliberate.
27:24The telephone calls between Whitlock and the Coffin Factory.
27:27No, Whitlock called everyone.
27:29No, it needs to be something more specific.
27:33Oh.
27:34What about this?
27:38The coffin screw from the ambassador's carriage.
27:43Why do you carry this with you?
27:45I guess as a keepsake.
27:47From the first day we started working together.
27:50Amelia, if I had known back then when we first met.
27:55If I understood.
27:57If I had made a better breakfast.
28:00Oh there.
28:01Wretched breakfast.
28:02I shall never forget it.
28:04Well, to be fair, you didn't taste it.
28:06Why I chose life was the sensible solution.
28:09But you're quite right.
28:10This...
28:12This screw is so specific to Withersi's factory.
28:17Yes.
28:19Yes, yes.
28:22That's why Weems and Maggot were executed.
28:25To cover their escape, they set fire to the very place the gold was to be hidden.
28:30The thread must have been furious.
28:31You certainly were.
28:33Do you think they left the screw there for you to find on purpose?
28:35Yes.
28:36Yes.
28:37Someone brilliantly anticipated my actions, but they could never have foreseen yours.
28:41So, let us prove the theory by finding the gold.
28:46What if the coachmen are all still there at the factory?
28:48I mean, there are a lot of them.
28:50Do we need the police?
28:52No, no, no, no, no, no.
28:54We can't afford to have Whitlock warning them by telephone.
28:58Wait.
28:59I have the perfect solution.
29:00Yes.
29:02I have an idea where we might find the stolen gold, and there's not a second to lose.
29:05But, sir, I should really report this.
29:07Well, I could be wrong.
29:08It has happened, and perhaps we should make sure the gold is where we think it is before informing your superiors and having this case snatched from your hands.
29:19Yes, sir.
29:21Where to?
29:23Witherssea Coffin Factory.
29:24On the double.
29:25What?
29:26This place is more heavily guarded than I'd hoped.
29:43An observation I was on the verge of making myself.
29:47I bet they chased someone into the coffin factory.
29:49I hope by chasing someone you don't mean you.
29:52I'll get the guards to follow me inside.
29:53I can cut off their exit from the roof.
29:56Trust me, Mr. Holmes.
29:57This will work.
30:00Don't follow me until they're all inside.
30:01Ed, there's Robert the murderer's in here!
30:16The murderer's in here!
30:30Easy!
30:34Good day, gentlemen.
30:36We ask that you remain here quietly until suitable arrangements can be made.
30:41What do you think you're playing at?
30:42You're a copper.
30:43No, I'm not, but allow me to introduce.
30:45Detective Swan of Scotland Yard.
30:47And I'm arresting you all in the name of the Queen.
30:50Not to worry, Mr. Holmes.
30:52I've locked the doors from up here.
30:53The only place these blokes are going is prison.
30:56Thank you, Clarence.
30:57You've done more than I could have ever asked.
30:59Games up, gentlemen.
31:00Now up against the wall.
31:01Come on.
31:03Well, this is all well and good, but do they have my stolen jewels?
31:07No, no.
31:08Bertie, but now we shall have to satisfy ourselves with all this gold,
31:11but the gems will be back in your hands soon enough.
31:13I know where they are.
31:14Now, Shaw, if you and the rest of the Irregulars could please find Inspector Bullivon
31:18and tell them the happy news.
31:20And then we need some reinforcements.
31:23Did we just save England again, Mr. Holmes?
31:24We did indeed.
31:26I've never saved England before.
31:28How does it feel?
31:29Well, not bad, considering.
31:30Much worse for dear Mrs. Hudson than I.
31:33How is she faring?
31:34She's coming along.
31:35Helps being tended by her twin sister.
31:38Oh, I have a small gift for you.
31:42Your buttons, I believe.
31:46I'm glad to see that I did not destroy my waistcoat in vain.
31:49At least you knew we were alive.
31:51Come.
31:52I am anxious to hear the whole story.
31:54Crime of the century.
31:56Oh, hardly that.
31:57Nonsense.
31:58You recovered the gold, caught an entire factory filled with thieves, rescued us.
32:03About which I am most.
32:06Happy.
32:07Never think otherwise.
32:09But before Lord Witherssey killed himself, he implied a crime beyond my imagination,
32:14and that has not happened.
32:16There are so many orphaned pieces to this puzzle.
32:19Why steal plans for a weapon in California?
32:21Why demand keys of the American ambassador?
32:24No.
32:25The robbery and the kidnappings are not the whole story.
32:27There's something worse.
32:29What awful crime binds these disparate members of the Red Thread together?
32:34Red Thread.
32:35It will make a terrific title.
32:38Damn it, or I tire so easily.
32:40The after-effects of too much opium, dear boy.
32:42You'll soon wear off.
32:46Oh, no, there's that.
32:47Oh, ah, yes.
32:48Well, allow me to present Miss Amelia Rojas.
32:54She is my, er...
32:57My...
32:59My...
33:00Enough of these questions.
33:01The doctor is here to measure your progress.
33:04A little peace and quiet will do you good.
33:06Amelia?
33:08He's better.
33:18He'll have your old stalking partner back soon.
33:21Not soon enough.
33:22Clara's ball is two days handsome.
33:24By then, all our riddles must be answered.
33:26I've solved a lot of them already.
33:29Oh, which ones?
33:30Why you weren't murdered.
33:32Why we were meant to find the gold.
33:35And how the American ambassador will become a national hero.
33:39Well, your deductive powers have shown sensational progress.
33:42How did you manage all that?
33:45The evening paper.
33:47You're mentioned, too.
33:49As the greatest detective in the world.
33:52Amelia, that is not news.
33:53That is not news.
33:54Fortunately, I am immune to flattery, though we should always be grateful whenever the press elect to be precise.
34:03Oh, for goodness sake.
34:05After hearing of the robbery, the American ambassador hurriedly put together a consortium of investors.
34:13The purchase of the bank's plummeting shares stopped the panic and brought stability to the chaotic markets.
34:20In his speech to reporters later, he explained.
34:26When I heard the Bank of England's governor had engaged the brilliant Sherlock Holmes, I knew the gold would be found.
34:34My broker, Sir Nigel Parks, helped me to find others who would intervene.
34:38And together, we were able to halt the Bank of England's slide toward bankruptcy by the purchase of a majority of its shares.
34:45But nothing we did would have mattered without the greatest detective on earth exercising his miraculous abilities.
34:54The real victory belongs to Sherlock Holmes.
34:58Yes, by bringing the press with him into the vault, Whitlock made sure the world would know about the robbery and launched a financial panic.
35:06Allowing the thread to buy the bank for pennies on the pound.
35:09Just this afternoon, Ambassador Anderson made 10 million off an investment of 50,000 pounds.
35:16Yes, yes, yes, yes.
35:17In the meantime, the coachmen are carted off to jail without knowing how or why they were betrayed.
35:23Guess we didn't solve the crime of the century.
35:26We hope make it possible.
35:30Therefore, the greatest crime is yet to come.
35:32This broker, Sir Nigel Parks, is he not Dan Moriarty's employer? Did Dan also invest in this scheme?
35:42Where would he get the money?
35:44By muscling in on his father's organization, about which he may have known more than he let on.
35:52Yes.
35:55Let me see.
35:56I had both my profession as a mathematician and my greater enterprise to maintain.
36:00Greater enterprise?
36:02By which you mean the exploitation of human weakness through opium dens, gambling and houses of ill repute, run by men for whom loyalty is a vice best remedied by greed.
36:13And at Lady Violet's party was the young Moriarty who lured me outside.
36:18What do you mean Amelia was denied entry?
36:21That's unacceptable.
36:23Excuse me.
36:25Excuse me, Mr. Hunt.
36:26I just spoke to her.
36:27Wait, Mr. Hunt.
36:31And if I hadn't been viewed outside, I would never have seen the carriage, nor known how the gold went missing on its journey from the ship to the bank, were it not for that wretched boy.
36:43And of course that's why the other coach was waiting for your sham abductors.
36:51Kidnappers don't need getaway vehicles, they take their crime with them.
36:55All of this makes perfect sense if we change but one conclusion.
37:01What's that?
37:03I'm surprised to find someone of your intellect mistake in current circumstances for future prospects.
37:07Dan Moriarty did not kill the coachman to save you.
37:12Perhaps time will reveal just how much you underestimated my abilities.
37:16He did it to save me.
37:17Michael Wiley, here to visit with Professor James Moriarty.
37:31Professor James Moriarty.
37:45Father.
37:49Dear boy.
37:53Dear boy.
37:57Go.
37:58I'll call you if I need you.
38:00I apologise for my previous behaviour.
38:03It was necessary to deceive the pompous fool Holmes.
38:06I'm so relieved.
38:08Dear boy.
38:09But do not be dismissive.
38:10My most persistent adversary, Pompous.
38:12Oh yes, but Holmes is no fool.
38:15Not only did he rescue his friends, he foiled a perfect robbery of the Bank of England.
38:19I assure you, Father, in no way did Holmes foil anything.
38:22Almost as every move in solving these crimes was designed by me.
38:26What?
38:27But surely you did not.
38:28I robbed the Bank of England.
38:30And it went even better than hoped.
38:32But Holmes recovered the gold and the perpetrators had been arrested.
38:35Only because these actions were vital to my success.
38:38You see, by purchasing stock in the bank when it seemed almost certain to fail, I gained a great fortune when Holmes saved the day.
38:45I wonder where a broker's clerk found enough pounds to invest during an unexpected market panic.
38:53From you, of course.
38:54From me?
38:55More specifically, those elements of the Moriarty criminal syndicate I acquired through your less loyal henchmen.
39:01Accomplished by approving a more equal split in profits and long denied promotions.
39:06But you never took my businesses. That was the red thread.
39:10Do you still not understand?
39:11I am the red thread.
39:15Or the most important part of it.
39:17And tonight we achieve a far greater ambition than stupendous wealth.
39:20There is no greater ambition than wealth. It is a locus around which our entire empire revolves.
39:23Before the sun rises tomorrow, I will bring that empire to its knees.
39:28And I'll be well on my way to setting its colonies free.
39:31Now and forever.
39:33We have the financial means.
39:36We have the weapon.
39:38Now what we need is the inciting incident.
39:42You said yourself you could leave whenever you wanted.
39:46The ship awaits you even now.
39:48As does a villa in Ravenna where you can...
39:50Hold a moment.
39:52There is much here to consider.
39:54First, what do you mean bring the empire to its knees?
39:58Surely you intend no harm to her majesty.
40:01Well, kill the queen with so many princes to take her place.
40:05No.
40:07I will settle for nothing less than freeing the crown's colonies from British rule.
40:12In order to achieve that, I require war.
40:16Against England?
40:18Against all nations that would subjugate free people.
40:20I'm pressed for time.
40:21We can explain this.
40:22Dan, Dan, Dan.
40:24Are you planning to sacrifice yourself for some transient political cause?
40:31It's hardly transient.
40:33But do not worry, I am no martyr.
40:35Oh, but you are.
40:37To steal from me and boast of it to my face and then in recompense for your impudence offer me a life as a fugitive.
40:44Or were you planning to use my escape as a distraction to mislead the authorities into thinking that I was the author of your inciting incident?
40:52Very good.
40:53Very good.
40:54Very good, Father.
40:55Very good.
40:56Very good.
40:58Yes.
40:59Yes, that had been what I'd hoped.
41:01To achieve the evening's work and have all eyes trained on the disappearance of Professor Moriarty, the world's most famous criminal maniac.
41:11And as the search became more frantic, would I ever arrive at this villa or would my body be a better answer for your treason?
41:28Danquorth!
41:29Here's your professorship, sir.
41:30Show this young, unnatural man out and see that he never returns.
41:37Admit it, Father.
41:39You're a little proud of me, aren't you?
41:41Moriarty's do not overthrow empires.
41:43We corrupt them to our advantage.
41:44And I can feel little pride in a criminal who, when given the chance, fails to kill Sherlock Holmes.
41:51You mean like you?
41:52You mean like you?
42:21There you are.
42:22I can feel little pride in a little like you, until you stand up, and see in the story a little woman that shows you.
42:24I do also want to learn more about him.
42:25And I can feel like you should follow up and see that he has a victory for you.
42:26But I haven't heard it in her.
42:27You know, you may be good.
42:29There you will.
42:30You can be.
42:31You can get a good friend.
42:32You can be.
42:33I can be.
42:34And I'll see you.
42:35Okay.
42:36I'll see you.
42:37Bye.
42:38Bye.
42:39Bye.
42:40Bye.
42:41Bye.
42:42Bye.
42:43Bye.
42:44Bye.
42:46Bye.
42:47Bye.
42:48Bye.
42:49Bye.